The Star Malaysia

Sarah breaks barriers in rio marathon

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RIO DE JANEIRO: Pioneer Saudi sportswoma­n Sarah al-Attar has already raced at the Olympics, but now her campaign will become a marathon as she uses the Rio Games to break down barriers in the conservati­ve kingdom.

Sarah turned heads in the head-totoe outfit she patched together with her mother to race in the 800m at the 2012 London Games, where she was one of the first Saudi women Olympians.

This time Sarah, now 23, will take on the gruelling 42km marathon race in Rio, where four Saudi women will take part.

The women and seven Saudi men arrived in Rio on Monday, but were kept away from prying media.

Gender divisions are so sensitive that the Saudi Olympic Committee website did not name the women who will represent the country.

Along with Sarah, they are judoka Wujud Fahmi, fencer Lubna al-Omair and 100m runner Cariman Abu al-Jadail.

None qualified directly for their competitio­n, but will take part with special invitation­s from the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC).

Sarah has no regrets and no doubts about running in London and Rio.

“I was going for the women in Saudi Arabia, for all the young girls to have someone in the Olympics representi­ng them, giving them a picture of something they could one day strive for,” she said in a recent article for the Like The Wind runners’ magazine.

Sarah finished last in her 800m heat in London, more than half a minute behind her nearest rival. She still got a standing ovation when she crossed the line.

The California­n with Saudi-US nationalit­y has never run under three hours in four attempts on the Boston marathon, but can no doubt expect a similar acclaim in Rio.

Taking part in sport is not easy for Saudi women and finding women to go to the London Olympics was a challenge. Someone knew of the halfSaudi girl in California who liked running and so an invitation was made.

“My mom and I pieced together an outfit: a long-sleeve shirt, full-length running tights, and a head cover we found online,” Sarah told Marie-Claire magazine.

“I was proud to wear the uniform and liked that wearing the appropriat­e dress connected me to Saudi girls who want to run and have to be covered while they do it.”

Since London, Sarah has become a sponsored athlete training with elite women runners in Mammoth Lakes, California. Sarah and her family have also noticed change in Saudi Arabia since the London Games. Her father, Amer Attar, told the

Washington Post how on a 2011 visit, when his daughter wanted to go on a run, he gave her a boyish “cap and warmup pants” and drove beside her.

Last year, he saw men and women running together in Jeddah.

“I even saw a guy with his, I think, looked like his wife, and they were holding hands and running together. And she was wearing the abaya, and she was covered up, but they were actually running.”

Still, the IOC have rejected a suggestion by a Saudi Arabian official the conservati­ve kingdom could jointly host the Olympics with neighbouri­ng Bahrain, holding men’s and women’s events in separate states.

IOC president Thomas Bach said “a commitment to ‘non-discrimina­tion’ will be mandatory for all countries hoping to bid for the Olympics in the future”. — AFP

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