Kenya’s Paul Tergat set one of the most outstanding World records last
year when he became the first man to run a marathon under 2 hours and 5 minutes
but his biggest challenge may yet have to come. Recently appointed as the
United Nations World Food Programme ambassador Tergat is set for the most
important battle of his life, the one against hunger in the world. By Bob
Ramsak
Paul Tergat knows about the importance of a warm meal. Which is precisely
why he’s approaching his recent appointment as a World Food Programme
(WFP) Ambassador Against Hunger with the same level of seriousness as he is
with training for this summer’s Olympic Games.
Long before he could even dream about his five World Cross Country
championship titles, his pair of Olympic silver medals and his World record run
in the marathon, Tergat faced a daily struggle for survival confronted by
millions around the world - wondering where there next meal would come
from.
"My Dad wasn a rich man and he was quite old but the only thing he knew
was that he wanted for us to go to school," explained Tergat, recalling
his youth in a family of 17 children in the dry expanse of Kenya’s Rift
Valley. "But it was very difficult to go every day because there was
nothing to eat. Most of the kids didn want to go to school because they were
more interested in trying to get food, so we used to stay behind to look after
the animals.” But droughts would often kill his family’s meager
herd of livestock. “I grew up in a very humble background. It was very
difficult for us to go to school. Life was very difficult. Poverty was rampant
in our area.”