timeeurope.com

TIME Europe Home
  Europe
  Middle East
  Africa
  World
  Digital Europe
  Business
  Travel & Arts
  Photo Essays
  TIME Trails
  Magazine
  Archive
  Fast Forward

Special Features
  Fast Forward
  Forecast 2001
  E-Europe
Search TIME Europe
 
Subscribe to TIME
Subscriber Services
About Us

TIME Daily
TIME Asia
TIME Canada
TIME Pacific
TIME Digital
Latest CNN News

FREE NEWSLETTER!
Sign up now for TIME's WorldWatch email newsletter.
[ preview ]

 


Other News
spacer gif
spacer gif
Check the New 2000
FORTUNE 500 Today!

FORTUNE.com

spacer gif
Sivy On Stocks,
By E-Mail

MONEY.com

spacer gif
The 'X-Men' Cometh
And EW's Got 'Em!

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

spacer gif



TIME EUROPE
December 25, 2000, Vol. 156 No. 26


NEWSMAKERS of 2000
Cathy Freeman
By DANIEL WILLIAMS Sydney

If Cathy Freeman competes in the 2004 Olympic games in Athens, she will be just a runner; rich, famous and probably much admired, but a runner just the same. But on the evening of Sept. 25, as she crouched in the blocks at Sydney's Olympic stadium for the 400-m final, she was something else. More than merely representing Australia, she had — through forces largely beyond her control — come to embody it.

The biggest year of Freeman's life coincided with a period of unprecedented national introspection. Just after voters rejected a proposal that Australia become a republic came the clamor of the world en route to Sydney. Australia's excitement was tinged with trepidation. Could the brash city pull off a Games? Freeman felt similar anxiety about a home Olympic final. Like Sydney, she could not afford to fail. Australians not only expected her to win, but wanted her to win more than any other local athlete.

Her Aboriginality imbued her quest with poignancy and significance. On Sunday, May 28, 250,000 people walked across the Sydney Harbour Bridge in the name of reconciliation between non-Aboriginal and Aboriginal Australians, who comprise 2.17% of the country's 19 million people. Never before had mainstream Australia so powerfully expressed its sympathy for Aborigines' plight: their high rates of alcoholism, unemployment, disease and premature death.

As an Aboriginal woman who'd excelled in sport, Freeman had won from mainstream Australia a peculiar affection. The 27-year-old from Mackay, North Queensland is both an ingenue and strangely charismatic. In 1994, when she breached protocol by brandishing the Aboriginal flag on her victory lap at the Commonwealth Games in Victoria, Canada, Freeman became an overnight celebrity. Though that incident was an overt political statement, she would make few more in the next six years. And it was this reserve, this dignity, that endeared her to Australians. She was unspoiled, irreverent. Minutes after winning a silver medal at the Atlanta Olympics, she told a reporter: "I just ran my little black butt off."

Freeman's elevation to the status of national symbol was formalized on the night of Sept. 15, when she lit the Olympic caldron at the opening ceremony. The choice of Freeman reflected the image Australians wanted to show the world: young, beautiful, unpretentious — and on the verge of greatness. Ten nights later she carried the burden of a nation's hopes and insecurities. She trailed Jamaica's Lorraine Graham as they entered the final straight of the 400 m, but pulled away to win gold. Seconds later, she slumped tearily to the track. At no time before the race, she said later, "was I brave enough to consider what life might have been like if I hadn't won."

The tide that carried Freeman to the forefront of a nation's attention has subsided, but she is likely to remain a force in athletics for years to come; she has also hinted at an interest in politics. Any public figure would envy the honor she earned in 2000, when a nation held its breath and a free spirit captured its heart.

This edition's table of contents
TIME Europe home


More stories from TIME Europe and related links

E-mail us at mail@timeatlantic.com

Like what you're reading?
Click here to try 4 FREE ISSUES of TIME






More Stories

COVER STORY: TIME'S MAN OF THE YEAR
Person of the Year: George W. Bush
The presidency is his after the Supreme Court ends the fight for Florida's electoral votes, but the Texas Governor knows he still must earn the accompanying honor

Exclusive Q & A
Frank talk about his priorities, race, wrong ideas about him, and Al

Viewpoint: The American Paradox
What the world can expect from the new, relatively unworldly President

TIME's Person of the Year special
Full coverage of TIME's Man of the Year from the U.S. edition

RUNNERS UP
J.K. Rowling: A Universe in Her Hand
Her wizardry turned on a new generation to that old technology, the wondrous printed word

J. Craig Venter: Cracking the Code of Life
The bad boy of science has jump-started a biological revolution

NEWSMAKERS 2000
Vojislav Kostunica
Right man at the right time

Mohammed Al-Durra
Totem of the intifadeh

Robert Mugabe
Last of the post-colonial nationalists

Kim Jong Il
The hermit who came in from the cold

Vincente Fox Quesada
Coca-Cola revolutionary

Cathy Freeman
The millennial symbol of a nation

George Speight
Fiji's would-be strongman

John Roth
Nortel's high-flying CEO

EUROPE
The E.U.'s Nice Try
A treaty that just clears the bar

Q & A
Guy Verhofstadt of Belgium, small states' fighter

DEPARTMENTS
Tech Watch

World Watch

WHAT DO YOU THINK?
E-mail us at mail@timeatlantic.com

Copyright © 2001 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
E-mail us:  Letter to the Editor | Customer Service
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Press Releases