Why the Boston Marathon’s last-place runner earned his medal

Why the Boston Marathon’s last-place runner earned his medal

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Maickel Melamed, in wheelchair and flanked by his supporters, receives a medal from Boston Mayor Martin Walsh. City of Boston, Mayor’s Office

BOSTON -Twenty hours after the start of Monday’s Boston Marathon, Venezuelan long-distance runner Maickel Melamed crossed the finish line, prompting an impromptu City Hall ceremony in his honor later that morning.

Melamed finished far behind the marathon’s winners, but nonetheless he received a medal.

That’s because Melamed, who is Jewish, has lived since birth with a medical condition similar to muscular dystrophy, and it severely restricts his mobility. Mayor Martin Walsh said he assembled the ceremony to recognize Melamed after learning about the Venezuelan’s inspiring last-place finish.

“For you. I run for you,” Melamed said at the ceremony, acknowledging the two-year anniversary of the Boston Marathon bombings that killed three people and left others with loss of limbs and other serious injuries. “I run to send a message, to rise the bar of expectation for your own self.

“The message here is that love is more powerful than death,” he said.

The storied 26.2-mile Boston course marks the fifth marathon finish for Melamed, who will turn 40 next week. He also has completed races in Berlin, Chicago, New York, and Tokyo.

In 2011, after Melamed finished the New York marathon, a Venezuelan television reporter posted an anti-Semitic tweet mocking him, sparking condemnation from the Simon Wiesenthal Center. Melamed, who has taught at the Caracas Jewish day school where he had been a student, works with youth groups and is a popular motivational speaker.

“It was real tough, but it was marvelous,” Melamed told reporters at the Boston ceremony Tuesday. “You have to know why you’re doing it, because in the last mile, the marathon will ask you if you have a reason, and if you don’t have it, you will quit.”

Melamed said Boston held a special attraction for him, recalling that when he was a child, his parents brought him to its Children’s Hospital for medical treatment. “I learned to say, ‘Good morning’ with a smile on my face here in Boston.”

Seated in a wheelchair during the ceremony, Melamed acknowledged his team of supporters from the Caracas-based foundation Vamos, who at times held umbrellas shielding him from the driving rain and thunderstorms.

“I’m not running this alone,” he said. “We as a team crossed the finish line.”

JTA Wire Service

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