I thought I might add a bit to the Billy Mills story from class. Mills, an Oglala Lakota, was born on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in
After graduation, Mills enlisted with the Marines where he continued his running and in 1964 he made the
Despite all of this, Mills went out with the leaders during the race. He passed through the halfway point (5000meters) faster than he had ever run a 5000meter race before. Despite this, Mills kept up with the leaders and with one lap to go he was one of four men that still had a chance to medal (if you watch the video on youtube, which I highly recommend, all of those other runners are being lapped). With about 300meters to go, Australian Ron Clarke elbowed Mills which knocked him almost out to lane three. Mills regrouped and made a heroic sprint towards the finish, winning in an Olympic record of 28:24.4. Many track and field experts still consider Mills’ victory the greatest upset in Olympic history. To this day, no other American has ever won an Olympic gold medal in the 10,000meters. A year later, Mills set a world record for the 6mile run and retired shortly afterwards.
Besides Mills’ ferocious training (he ran up to 90miles a week), he also maintained a traditional Lakota diet that was based on a 4 day cycle. One day, he ate something from “on the ground” (buffalo, deer, lamb, or beef); the next day “from the water” (fish); the next “from the air” (birds, chicken, or turkey); the next day from “in the ground” (vegetables). Each day, the diet also required foods of five colors: red, green, yellow, brown, and white; and they had to be “live” foods like fruit and grain.
Today, Mills travels the country giving various speeches. He works for Running Strong for American Indian Youth and with Wings of America, which promotes Native American running. If you ever get the chance, I highly recommend attending one of his speeches. They are truly inspirational. There is a movie about Mills’ struggles called Running Brave that covers his struggles as a Native American all the way through his Olympic victory. Mills has also written two books, “Lessons of a Lakota” and “Wokini: A Lakota Journey to Happiness and Self-Understanding”.
(Sorry for such a long post, but I am a huge Billy Mills fan and I find his story truly remarkable and inspiring. I got most of this info from Marc Bloom’s “Run with the Champions”. In the book, Bloom ranks Mills as the 6th greatest American runner ever.)
2 comments:
When my family visited the Crazy Horse monument in SOuth Dakota a few years ago, Billy Mills was the speaker in the introductory video. He told how Crazy Horse was his hero because of what he stood for as a warrior, and how it needs to be supported by the public.
Wow! When Tai talked about him in class, I was absolutely amazed, and I am so glad you shared the rest of that information. It really pisses me off (but I am not the least bit surprised) to learn about all of the discrimination Billy Mills had to face and overcome despite his tremendious talent.
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