A 21-year-old Palestinian swimmer embodied the Olympic spirit and fulfilled her lifelong ambition to compete at the Olympics last week and she deserves a gold medal for her tenacity.
Zakia Nassar had neither a coach nor access to an Olympic-sized pool for the past year but didn;t let that stop her.
Nassar, who is currently studying dentistry, had no option but to train on her own at a 12 m public pool.
The coach Nassar had a year ago left her to her own devices when the 25 m pool in Bethlehem was closed down.
"There is no pool in Jenin where I am studying," she said.
"So I can swim only once or twice a month when I go back to my parents' home in Bethlehem."
There is a 50 m pool in nearby Nazareth, but the Israeli government does not permit her to use it.
Nassar said it was often embarrassing trying to train at the public pool, with other people swimming and splashing around.
"Sometimes people cut across me, and others would get angry when I swam into them. But quite a few made way for me," she said.
"I got so depressed sometimes I couldn't help crying, but my parents and friends encouraged me, reminding me that I had to keep training if I really wanted to go to the Olympics."
It was only when Nassar arrived in China a month ago that she finally got the opportunity to swim in a 50 m pool and enjoy the benefits of having a coach.
When she at last took part in the Games, she swam the 50 m in 31.97 seconds, an improvement of 7 seconds on her personal best.
Despite her time being good enough only for 79th place, Nassar said it was "the most beautiful moment" of her life.
"Participating in a race at the Olympics was a once-in-a-lifetime experience," she said.
"It felt like I was flying."
But she is not sure if she will go to the next Olympics.
"I won't compete unless I've done the right training. But as swimming is in my soul, I'll probably be a coach in my spare time."
Questions:
1. How long is the pool Palestinian Swimmer Zakia Nassar had to train in, instead of the usual 50m long Olympic pool?
2. How did Nassar say she felt about swimming in the Olympics even although her time was only good enough for 79th place?
3. Why could Nassar not swim in the 50m pool in Nazareth, close to her home?
Answers:
1. 12m.
2. She said it was “the most beautiful moment of her life”.
3. Because the Israeli Government wouldn’t let her.
(英語點津 Helen 編輯)
Dylan Quinnell is a freelance journalist and photographer from New Zealand who has worked in TV, print, film and online. With a strong interest in international affairs, he has worked in Denmark, Indonesia and Australia, covering issues like the EU, indigenous people and deforestation. Dylan is in Beijing on an Asia New Zealand grant working as a copy editor for the English news department.