<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9601240864
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
960801
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, August 01, 1996
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
7D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo BOB LEVERONE/Knight-Ridder Tribune
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>



Hezekiel  Sepeng runs his way to Olympic history as the first
black man to win a medal for South Africa. He missed a gold by
two-tenths of a second.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
ATLANTA '96
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1996, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
S. AFRICAN BLACK MAN SHATTERS BARRIER
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
ATLANTA --  He screamed as he crossed the finish line, a howl that
seemed loud enough to bring down a wall. Which, in many ways, was what he had
just done. How did this happen? Going into the  final turn, Hezekiel Sepeng, a
small-boned man, weighing no more than 130 pounds, was boxed in, almost last.
Too many runners in front of him. Too little room to move. Were you a betting
man, you would  have figured on a slow, defeated fade, where the Olympian
limps across the line and drops to his knees in tears.

  You would have been wrong.

  Sometimes you run for yourself, sometimes you run for everybody else. The
man in the avocado green track suit was carrying a nation on his slim
shoulders, and millions of his people were back in South Africa now, glued to
their TV sets at 2:40 in the morning,  calling his name. What choice did he
have? How could he give up? As the runners came around that turn, Hezekiel
Sepeng began to move.
  He passed one man, then another, but he was still on the inside  lane and
was on the heels of fifth place. There was no time to waste. No time to see
how the others shook out, if they would give him a opening. Sepeng bolted --
to the outside. For a moment, he was  running sideways!
  "What's he doing?" his countrymen yelled.  . . . 
  What's he doing? It was not so long ago that Sepeng was hearing that back
in South Africa, as the only black runner at an all-white  high school. He had
been brought there by a short, balding coach named J.P. van der Merwe, who
noticed the kid running barefoot around a filthy soccer field in his poor
township, 100 miles southwest  of Johannesburg. 
  "You run well," the coach told Sepeng. "I might be able to arrange a
scholarship at Boy's High."
  "But that's a white school," Sepeng said.
  "Trust me."
  Van der Merwe  gave Sepeng his first pair of shoes. He drove him home after
school, to the dilapidated farm where his family lived, a place with no
electricity and no plumbing.
  In his first race at Boy's High,  the whites called Sepeng "kaffir,"  the
n-word of South Africa -- and they elbowed him when he ran the track. They
boxed him in. They blocked him out.
  They did everything but catch him.
  Now he  was racing for all of them . . . 
The final seconds
  Past the fourth-place runner now. Past the third. The crowd was on its
feet, roaring. With 20 meters to go in the 800, Sepeng was on the far  outside
-- almost in his own race -- and his arms swung wildly and his face contorted
in pain. Still he gained speed. There were two men ahead of him, a Kenyan and
a Norwegian. Ten meters. He pulled  even with the Kenyan. Five meters. He
passed the Kenyan. Two meters. He was on the heels of first place . . . 
  Finish line.
  Scream.
  South Africa had never had a black Olympic medalist. Until four years ago,
it had never had a black Olympian. This is a country in which apartheid was
policy, where white reigned supreme, where blacks were restricted, curfewed,
beaten, denied a vote. This is  a nation that jailed Nelson Mandela for most
of his life, that killed Steven Biko by pounding him to a bloody pulp in a
prison cell. We're not talking 100 years ago, or 50 years ago.
  We're talking  the last decade.
  In places like this, sports can be so important, because it cuts across all
lines, it makes people forget color. As he grew older and faster -- and his
country finally abolished apartheid, and opened its elections -- Hezekiel
Sepeng, all of 5-feet-7, became an ambassador of hope.
  These were his first Olympics. He was only 22, still new to racing, still
prone to mistakes.  At the world championships in 1993,  he got boxed in
during a semifinal and was in danger of elimination. Johnny Gray, the American
800-meter star, moved over and yelled at Sepeng to sprint ahead.
  "He told me it was because I was a black man from South Africa," Sepeng
would later explain, "and that a lot of people were interested in what I did.
He also told me not to count on it happening again."
  On Wednesday night, one of the runners he passed down the stretch: Johnny
Gray.
The final result
  Hezekiel Sepeng did not win the gold. He finished less than two-tenths of
a second behind the  Norwegian, Vebjoern Rodal. Had the race been another 10
feet, it would have had a different result.
  Not that it mattered. Here, in a misty rain, history had been made. A black
man had won an Olympic  medal for South Africa. Sepeng grabbed a flag from one
of his countrymen -- the new flag, of a country that recognized that a man is
a man -- and he draped himself inside it and ran around the track.
  "I am happy to be a South African," he exclaimed, in the tunnel underneath
the Olympic Stadium. "In sports, we are all together.
  "The time is my best ever. That is the present I give to myself.  The
medal, I give to my country."
  Back in his hometown, his parents watched on television. He could not call
them, because they do not own a phone. Still, they know how he feels. They saw
it in his  eyes, in his smile, in his flapping the flag behind him.
  And finally, they saw it when the official took the silver medal and draped
it around his neck.
  Sometimes you run for yourself, sometimes  you run for everybody. Hezekiel
Sepeng stood up straight, and in a cleansing rain, held his medal high for the
whole world to see. Somewhere in the distance you heard a wall come tumbling
down.
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
HEZEKIEL SEPENG; TRACK; OLYMPIC; COLUMN
</KEYWORDS>
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