<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9601230678
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
960723
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, July 23, 1996
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1996, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
AMERICAN DREAM PLAYS BADMINTON
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ATLANTA --  It's true, I admit, I've done my share of knocking badminton
at the Summer Games. Like millions of others, I couldn't understand how
something you play after roasting marshmallows could  qualify as an Olympic
sport. Birdies? Shuttlecocks? The jokes were almost too easy, and I took every
one.

  But Monday, I was wandering past a briefing room when I noticed a small
press conference.  I went in --  there were only a half-dozen reporters there
-- and I took a seat. On the podium was --  you guessed it --  the U.S.
Olympic badminton team. All three of them. Two women and one man. The  man was
Chinese. He spoke with an accent. I wondered about that --  seeing as this was
an American team --  so when the thing broke up, I sat down to talk with him,
hoping to find an amusing little badminton  story.

  What I found was something else entirely.
  Kevin Han is his name, although Kevin is not the name he was born with in
Shanghai, where he lived for the first 17 years of his life. He was  being
groomed for greatness in China. He was tall and quick, and at 13 he went to a
special sports academy, where they trained him five hours a day in his most
promising sport: badminton.
  In China,  they don't laugh at badminton; it is enormously popular.
Badminton stars are cheered, they are considered heroes, thousands come out to
watch the matches. Han was on his way to all that.
  Unfortunately,  his father wasn't there to see it. Han's parents divorced
when he was young, and his dad emigrated to America, in hopes of a better,
freer life. Han's great- grandfather had been a sailor who jumped overboard
and swam to the shores of San Francisco. Ever since, in the Han family,
America had been the land of dreams.
  Now, after six years away, Han's father wrote to his son: "I want to be a
better father  to you. I want to make up for the time we were apart. I have
arranged for you to come to live with me in America. Please come."
  And because we often do things with our hearts rather than our heads,
young Han packed a single suitcase and two badminton rackets and turned his
back on a glorious future for a father he hadn't seen enough, and a country he
had never seen at all.
The adjustment was difficult  . . . 
  "When I first got here, I stay in our Brooklyn apartment 26 days," Han
said, his long frame draping over the chair as we spoke. "I was too afraid to
go outside. I couldn't watch TV --  I  did not understand it.
  "I learned that my father was out of work. He had no money for me. So
every morning, we go to look for work together."
  Han's first job was in a Chinese restaurant in  New Jersey, packing up the
takeout. He understood the orders in Chinese, but didn't know the words for
the food in English. There is no "egg foo young" in his language.
  After three days, he was  fired.
  His next job came as a delivery boy in Manhattan. During the day, Han
walked the food to office buildings. At night he delivered by bicycle,
navigating the dangerous New York streets. Three  times, he was hit from
behind by people in cars -- the last time, on purpose. The passengers threw
things at him and laughed out the window.
  "That night, I go home and cry," Han said. "I think,  'Why did I give up
my easy life in China? I could be with national team, traveling around the
world. Instead I am in the street.' ''
  Han had not touched his beloved badminton rackets in nearly two  years.
Nobody he knew played it. He didn't even know where to ask. He had gained 20
pounds and had lost all his conditioning. He was nothing like the promising
athlete he had been in China. He was a  stranger to himself.
  Then one day, a new friend told him about a gym in Queens where they
played badminton every Wednesday night.
 . . . but he learned to love freedom
  Wednesdays led to Fridays,  and Fridays led to leagues, and soon, it was
obvious that this Chinese kid was far better than everyone he was playing. He
got involved with the Olympic training program and eventually moved to
Marquette,  then to Miller Place, N.Y., and finally to Colorado Springs. He
studied English. He began to understand TV.
  One day, a few years ago, he went to an office in Chicago and took an
oath. And three  weeks later, a blue passport arrived in the mail. Kevin Han
--  he chose the first name from a book --  was now a citizen.
  "You are a real American now," he told himself, and he looked at the photo
 and cried.
  Today, at 23, he is the best hope America has ever had for a medal in his
sport --  although he is still an Olympics away from that. Last week, at the
athletes' village, Han ran into the Chinese team, some of whom were his old
training mates. He showed them how to order food, how to get to the buses.
  "They envy me," he said, "because they want to experience this country,
but  they don't know how."
  Han knows how. He gave up a lot to live here. When he sees his old team,
he wonders if, had he stayed in China, he might be competing for a medal now.
"But I would not trade  my life in America for any medal," he said. "I am
happy."
  He got up to leave, the room was empty, and I walked with him to the front
of the building. I asked what he treasured most about America  and he said:
"Freedom. My story is the same as any immigrant's."
  Which means it is a little bit of all our stories, doesn't it?
  He thanked me and got on his bus. I felt a blush of shame. I  had come
looking for an amusing badminton tale. What I found, instead, was the
Olympics.
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
OLYMPIC; COLUMN
</KEYWORDS>
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