"That is not enough. Sport has been great for me, a great learning place that if you want to achieve you can, even if you are from the poorest part of Africa"
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The line lands like a refusal to let the feel-good version of a sports success story do all the talking. “That is not enough” is Gebrselassie pushing back against the tidy myth that talent plus grit automatically equals justice. He’s not denying the power of sport; he’s refusing to let personal triumph become a substitute for structural change.
Then he pivots: sport has been “a great learning place,” which sounds almost modest for someone of his stature. The phrasing matters. He frames athletics less as a miracle and more as a classroom: rules, discipline, repetition, humiliation, recovery. That’s the subtext behind “if you want to achieve you can.” It’s motivational, but it’s also conditional: achievement requires institutions that reward effort, coaches who notice you, a body that holds up, a political moment that lets you travel, a global audience willing to care. For an Ethiopian runner who became a world icon, sport wasn’t just competition; it was mobility in the most literal sense.
The kicker is the geography: “even if you are from the poorest part of Africa.” He’s invoking the Western gaze that treats African excellence as an anomaly, then redirecting it into a challenge. Yes, greatness can come from scarcity. No, scarcity shouldn’t be the price of entry. The intent isn’t to romanticize poverty; it’s to claim dignity for where he’s from while warning listeners not to confuse an inspiring exception with an acceptable norm.
Then he pivots: sport has been “a great learning place,” which sounds almost modest for someone of his stature. The phrasing matters. He frames athletics less as a miracle and more as a classroom: rules, discipline, repetition, humiliation, recovery. That’s the subtext behind “if you want to achieve you can.” It’s motivational, but it’s also conditional: achievement requires institutions that reward effort, coaches who notice you, a body that holds up, a political moment that lets you travel, a global audience willing to care. For an Ethiopian runner who became a world icon, sport wasn’t just competition; it was mobility in the most literal sense.
The kicker is the geography: “even if you are from the poorest part of Africa.” He’s invoking the Western gaze that treats African excellence as an anomaly, then redirecting it into a challenge. Yes, greatness can come from scarcity. No, scarcity shouldn’t be the price of entry. The intent isn’t to romanticize poverty; it’s to claim dignity for where he’s from while warning listeners not to confuse an inspiring exception with an acceptable norm.
Quote Details
| Topic | Sports |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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