“Running for My Life: One Lost Boy’s Journey from the Killing Fields of Sudan to the Olympic Games” A book by Lopez Lomong and Mark Tabb

In the summer of 2000, Lopez Lomong was 15. Nine of those years he’d spent in a refugee camp in Kenya. He had never seen a television and had no idea what the Olympics were. But when several of his friends walked five miles to watch the games on a grainy, black and white set powered by a car battery, he went along.

The highlight was the 400-meter dash, and the winner was the great American sprinter Michael Johnson. Lomong recalls the walk home: “In my mind’s eye I watched Michael Johnson run his race over and over again and I knew that someday, I, too, would run in the Olympics.” That wasn’t all: “I wanted to run with those same three letters across my chest: USA.”

Talk about an impossible dream. Yet it came true. Eight years later, Lomong represented the United States at the Beijing Olympics, making the semifinals in the 1,500-meter race before a cranky hamstring ended his medal hopes. This week he will run again for his new country, moving up to the 5,000-meter run. This book tells how it all happened and I defy any reader to remain unmoved. When I saw a picture of Lomong in his Olympic uniform, tears came to my eyes. [Editor’s note: On Aug. 11 Lomong finished 10th in the Olympic race after taking an early lead.]

More than 40 Olympians on the U.S. squad are foreign-born, and that’s particularly fitting because immigrants contribute so much to our national culture and character. The great genius of America is that it draws newcomers from all over the world who are particularly resilient, talented and tenacious. Some build houses, as my grandfathers did after arriving from Russia 100 years ago. Others crate groceries or create Google. A few jump very high and run very fast.

book cover

Running for My Life: One Lost Boy’s Journey from the Killing Fields of Sudan to the Olympic Games

By Lopez Lomong and Mark Tabb

Thomas Nelson Publishers, 229 pages

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In fact, when Lomong was born in the tiny Sudanese village of Kimotong, his parents prophetically named him Lopepe, which means “fast” in their dialect (Lopez is a nickname). The family lived in a mud hut with no running water or electricity. The village had no school, and his parents were illiterate. They didn’t own a plow and planted their crops entirely by hand. When rebel soldiers kidnapped all the children at a church service and threw them into the back of a truck, it was the first time the boy had ridden in any vehicle.

The rebels were training their captives to be soldiers when three older boys engineered an escape and took Lomong with them. They ran for days, thinking they were headed home, but instead found themselves in Kenya, where border guards sent them to a refugee camp. Life there was boring and food scarce. The high point of their week came when the U.N. workers who ran the facility dumped their refuse and the boys “went after the garbage like hungry hyenas fighting over a gazelle carcass.” Lomong’s only mental escape was sports, and most days he ran around the perimeter of the camp, 18 miles, in bare feet. “When I ran, I was in control of my life,” he writes. “I ran for me.”

Not long after the 2000 Olympics, the United States decided to accept 3,500 “lost boys” from Sudan, and after Lomong made it through the selection process he was sent to live with a family in upstate New York. He failed some of his initial high school courses, but again, running saved him. “Running was about the only thing familiar for me in America,” he writes. “I had to learn everything else from scratch.”

Lomong’s parents had buried his meager belongings — a shirt, shorts, a few toys — under a pile of rocks in the village graveyard. But his mother never stopped looking for him, and one day she showed up in the Kenyan camp asking questions. His friends told her that Lomong was living in America, and eventually the message reached him: Call your mother, here’s her cellphone number. He had largely forgotten his boyhood language, Buya, and he could barely understand her. She was equally confused and didn’t recognize his voice: “She expected the voice of a child, not a full-grown man.” But she finally believed him when he said, “Yes, mother, I am alive.”

To see long excerpts from “Running for My Life” at Google Books, click here.

Lomong became a high school star, got a scholarship to track-power Northern Arizona University, met a girl and brought his two brothers to America. His foster parents, Rob and Barb Rogers, adopted five other Sudanese boys and sent money to Lomong’s family. The young man returned to Africa, saw his parents for the first time in 17 years, and was honored in a ceremony in his home village: A tribal elder smeared him with goat guts to bestow “a great blessing” and drive away any evil spirits. After seeing the poverty still gripping his homeland, he created a foundation aimed at improving living conditions in South Sudan.

It’s simply a great story, well-told (with the help of Mark Tabb) in unadorned language that makes it accessible to teenage readers as well as adults. When Lomong was running in the Olympic trials four years ago, a friend held up a sign saying “Run fast, Lopepe” in Swahili. After reading this book, you’ll be holding up your own sign and cheering for him when he runs in London.

Steven V. Roberts teaches journalism and politics at George Washington and is working on a book about immigrant athletes.

©2012, Washington Post Book World Service/Washington Post Writers Group

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