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- <text id=92TT1854>
- <title>
- Aug. 17, 1992: Memories Great and Small
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Aug. 17, 1992 The Balkans: Must It Go On?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- OLYMPICS, Page 52
- 1992 SUMMER GAMES
- Memories Great and Small
- </hdr><body>
- <p>From kayak to track, Barcelona's sparkling Olympics leave various
- and multihued images projected on the split screen of the mind's
- eye
- </p>
- <p>By Pico Iyer/Barcelona
- </p>
- <p> In Bhutan arrows whistle through the silent air.
- Citizens, dressed by law in medieval robes, saunter past
- buildings, constructed by law in traditional fortress style.
- There is no television yet in the Hidden Kingdom, and airlines
- first arrived during the '80s. Last year the country saw
- scarcely 1,500 tourists (or roughly the same number that pour
- into Disneyland every hour).
- </p>
- <p> Imagine, then, the sensation for three teenage archers--half of the third Olympic team ever sent from the Land of the
- Thunder Dragon--as they stepped out of their landlocked
- Himalayan kingdom and into the flashbulb glare of Barcelona's
- Olympics. Anxiously consulting an astrologer before they left,
- Bhutan's Olympians--all archers--had never boarded a plane
- before, or experienced summer heat. The Olympic Village was
- almost the size of their capital, Thimbu. And the biggest shock
- of all, said Namgyal Lhamu, was "the sea," which she, like the
- others, had only read about at home. "I thought Barcelona was
- going to be peaceful, like Thimbu," added a cheerful Pem
- Tshering. "But it's so busy!" High-rise buildings, spiceless
- food, subway trains--everything was a source of wonder for
- them. In Barcelona the archers thought back often to the quiet
- field in the middle of Thimbu where they practice among the
- willows; now, once more in Thimbu, they are doubtless telling
- their friends about a place where you have to pay for water.
- </p>
- <p> There are two kinds of memory: the official ones that
- belong to the world in highlight films, and the private ones
- that are preserved, if at all, in dusty photo albums. Some
- Olympic moments from Barcelona will now pass into the collective
- unconscious--Charles Barkley dunking, Gail Devers smiling,
- Derek Redmond in tears hobbling on his pulled hamstring toward
- the 400-m finish line, leaning on his father's shoulder. Others
- will be as unmarked as the snapshots the Bhutanese archers take
- back of a city full of boats.
- </p>
- <p> Carlos Saura, the dazzling Spanish director who is
- responsible for the movie of the Barcelona Games, has enough
- passionate drama to work with to film another Carmen. He could
- begin with Magic Johnson at the opening ceremonies, undertaking
- what Johnson, who has more cause than most to savor moments,
- called "the most important thing in my life." He could show Gwen
- Torrence sobbing uncontrollably as she collected her 200-m gold,
- and, 10 minutes later, in a raucous press conference, spitting
- out that drug use is "in swimming, it's in track and field, it's
- everywhere." And he could close with the stirring spirit of the
- Barcelonans themselves, gathering each night under their colored
- fountains in a show of happy pride.
- </p>
- <p> If there was a single all-around winner in the Olympic
- events, in fact, it was, on every level, Spain, and not just
- because the country claimed at least 13 gold medals, after
- winning only four in the past 96 years. The Chinese team was
- also a consistent surprise, and its women alone were everywhere
- one looked--scoring all 10s in the uneven bars, winning an
- archery shoot-off with bull's-eye after bull's-eye after
- bull's-eye, even striding off with the 10-km walk. The Unified
- Team forgot its differences long enough to enjoy one last
- triumph, and the Americans had good reason to cheer the Dream
- Team, as their swimmers, boxers, spikers and pitchers failed to
- live up to every high expectation. The Kenyans, as usual, showed
- all comers how to carry themselves--and transcend themselves--with grace.
- </p>
- <p> The success of the Games was not without qualification, of
- course--in part because of disqualifications. Never, surely,
- have so many events been decided after the competition was
- over. Sometimes (in the men's 10,000 m) disqualifications
- themselves were disqualified; sometimes (in boxing) even
- officials were disqualified. In some events, it seemed all those
- athletes who had not been suspended were at least suspected. In
- the first athletics event to be decided, the men's shot put,
- both the gold and bronze medalists had been suspended for using
- steroids; the silver medalist had been convicted of possessing
- amphetamines.
- </p>
- <p> Yet still the memories kept coming, as various and
- many-hued as the images in the cameras lined up along the track,
- each trained on a different local hero. Some of them would have
- to be edited, some would be shown only in Kuala Lumpur. One
- sunny Sunday morning, the badminton hall was filled with
- Malaysian smiles. The country's doubles team--the brothers
- Razif and Jalani Sidek--had just advanced to the semifinals,
- assuring Malaysia of its first Olympic medal ever. "What more
- could you ask for in life?" coach Punch Gunalan asked the air
- around him. One hour later, though, the country's brightest
- hope, Rashid Sidek (another brother) was upset in the
- quarterfinals by a Dane, and the hall was suddenly full of
- smiling Danes.
- </p>
- <p> Often, in fact, the memories had to be caught before they
- slipped away. The Canadian Curt Harnett whizzed around the
- cycling track in 10:368. "New Olympic record," proclaimed the
- public address system. Harnett exulted, while Australian Garry
- Neiwand came around. 10:330. "New Olympic record." Neiwand was
- beginning to celebrate when German Jens Fiedler whizzed past.
- 10:252. "New Olympic record."
- </p>
- <p> Many of the memories, indeed, were checkered, and
- soft-focus moments were framed by harder edges. The public
- memory recalls Linford Christie bursting past in the 100 m, arms
- upraised in triumph; the private one shows Mark Witherspoon, a
- medal hopeful in the same event, thunder down the track for 30
- meters, then suddenly collapse into a sickening heap, his tendon
- ruptured. On the scoreboard, the finish was played and replayed
- while Witherspoon lay alone, helpless on the track.
- </p>
- <p> Most often, though, the private memories seemed likely to
- outlast the public ones: one of the charms of the Olympics is
- that it plays tricks with perspective, so that ordinary Joes
- become superstars, and superstars can seem like ordinary Joes.
- There was Magic Johnson, his smile as broad as an unbalanced
- beam, taking in the women's gymnastics, and there was Steffi
- Graf, looking unusually relaxed (before her loss in the final
- to Jennifer Capriati) and confessing that she would have liked
- to try the 100 m. There was Jim Courier, speaking with touching
- sincerity of the joys of living in a tiny room without air
- conditioning. "I wouldn't miss staying in the Village for
- anything," he said. "You get up in the morning and you see some
- of the best athletes in the world going for jogs or eating
- breakfast. It's indescribable!" A few days later, the No. 1 seed
- was knocked out of both doubles and singles, and his conqueror,
- the Swiss giant Marc Rosset, was looking pleasantly bewildered.
- "I like the Village so much," said the unseeded Rosset, who went
- on to win the gold, "maybe I'm going to buy a flat in the
- Village."
- </p>
- <p> Iranians traded pins with Iraqis in the Games, and in the
- final inning of the semifinal game between baseball's
- archrivals, Cuban first baseman Lourdes Gourriel--on his way
- back to a bankrupt island--wished American Phil Nevin every
- success in the major leagues. By week's end, all those who came
- were leaving with some such memento: with a large round weight
- around their necks, or a picture of themselves with Magic
- Johnson; with shaved heads or ruptured tendons. Barcelona has
- long been famous as a city of artists and laborers, a "city of
- marvels" where discipline and flight converge. Now, to the
- famous roll call of its industrious dreamers--Casals and
- Picasso, Miro and Lorca, Gaudi and Garcia Marquez--can be
- added some new names: Joyner-Kersee and Jordan, Scherbo and
- Laumann. Besides, Barcelona now has something to remember Thimbu
- by, and even in television-less Thimbu there is a rumor of a
- place called Barcelona.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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