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Anything is possible through sport

In Rio, we showed the world that, as refugees, we can do anything. Being a refugee is not the end. For me, with the IOC by my side, it was the start of a new journey.

Yiech Pur Biel
Oviedo, Spain
Fri, October 28, 2022

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Anything is possible through sport Yiech Pur Biel of South Sudan is the first-ever refugee elected as an International Olympic Committee member. (Courtesy of/IOC)

T

here are only two times in my life that I’ve cried: When my mother left me, and when I received the news that I would be on the first-ever International Olympic Committee (IOC) Refugee Olympic Team.

When I walked into the Olympic Stadium with my teammates for the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games Rio 2016, it was a defining moment for me. One I will never forget. I can still hear the crowd cheering for us and thought of my fellow refugees in Kakuma, and my family.

I took a moment to reflect on everything I had gone through to reach this point and the message we needed to send to the watching world.

We were ambassadors of hope at Rio 2016, spreading a message that anything is possible. Today, as the IOC Refugee Olympic Team and the Olympic Refuge Foundation are about to receive the Princess of Asturias Award for Sports, this message has proved to be true.

When I was separated from my mother, I wasn’t sure I’d see her again. I wasn’t sure she was alive. It was in Rio that the IOC reunited me with my family. As an Olympian, I spoke to my birth mother for the first time since I was 10 years old.

This is the power of sport. This is the value of the Olympic Movement.

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In Rio, we showed the world that, as refugees, we can do anything. Being a refugee is not the end. For me, with the IOC by my side, it was the start of a new journey.

After I returned from running the 800m at Rio 2016, the IOC helped me to enroll as a student at Iowa Central Community College in the United States. I was then made a Goodwill Ambassador for the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and appointed by the IOC as team leader of the IOC Refugee Olympic Team at Tokyo 2020. I have been able to show more people than ever that there is no shame in being a refugee. That anything is possible.

Now that I have also been appointed as an IOC member and a board member of the Olympic Refuge Foundation, the IOC continues to strengthen my ability to shine a light on the world’s conflicts, providing me with a vital platform to speak for and with my fellow refugees.

In 2005, when I was just 10, government troops came to my village amid the conflict in South Sudan. It was life-changing, but I was one of the lucky ones. I escaped with my mother and brother. We spent three days in the bush, eating only fruits, before being rescued by the United Nations and finding refuge in Kenya. That is where I got into running and first discovered the power of sport in uniting people.

With the support of the Olympic Refuge Foundation – the organization created by the IOC – I recently returned to the refugee camp in Kakuma. I saw my family and advocated that refugees can find belonging through sport and shape their own future.

Thanks to the Foundation, which has a goal for 1 million young people affected by displacement to access safe sport by 2024, I can now give back to the communities who inspired my own journey.

From myself, and on behalf of all refugees around the world, I thank the Princess of Asturias Foundation for this historic recognition. There is no better tool than sport to unite people; in the Kakuma camp, I saw friendships develop between 19 different nationalities.

All through the power of sport. And at Rio 2016 and Tokyo 2020, we competed as one in peaceful competition. You never know what tomorrow holds; anyone can be a refugee, but so too can anyone dream and achieve their dreams.

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The writer is a member of the first-ever IOC Refugee Olympic Team at Rio 2016 and, since 2022, the first-ever refugee elected as an IOC member.

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