Boughera El Ouafi: Difference between revisions

 

Line 26: Line 26:

==Early life==

==Early life==

Boughera El Ouafi was born in the town of [[Ouled Djellal]] in [[French Algeria]] in 1903.<ref name=”Dendoune”>{{Cite web |last=Dendoune |first=Nadir |date=2 November 2021 |title=JO 1928. La détermination de Jasmine pour sortir de l’oubli son grand-oncle, vainqueur du marathon |url=https://www.lecourrierdelatlas.com/jo-1928-la-determination-de-jasmine-pour-sortir-de-loubli-son-grand-oncle-vainqueur-du-marathon/ |access-date=5 August 2025 |website=lecourrierdelatlas |language=fr-FR |archive-date=18 April 2025 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250418043344/https://www.lecourrierdelatlas.com/jo-1928-la-determination-de-jasmine-pour-sortir-de-loubli-son-grand-oncle-vainqueur-du-marathon/ |url-status=live }}</ref> Prior to [[World War I]], he won many local races in Algeria and earned the nickname “the flying [[Berbers|Berber]]”. He was drafted into the 25th Infantry Regiment of the [[French Army]] in late 1918; however, the war ended soon after and he never saw combat.<ref name=”Terret” />{{rp|3}}

Boughera El Ouafi was born in the town of [[Ouled Djellal]] in [[French Algeria]] in 1903.<ref name=”Dendoune”>{{Cite |=Dendoune |=Nadir |date=2 November 2021 |title=JO 1928. La détermination de Jasmine pour sortir de l’oubli son grand-oncle, vainqueur du marathon |url=https://www.lecourrierdelatlas.com/jo-1928-la-determination-de-jasmine-pour-sortir-de-loubli-son-grand-oncle-vainqueur-du-marathon/ |access-date=5 August 2025 |= |language=fr-FR |archive-date=18 April 2025 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250418043344/https://www.lecourrierdelatlas.com/jo-1928-la-determination-de-jasmine-pour-sortir-de-loubli-son-grand-oncle-vainqueur-du-marathon/ |url-status=live}}</ref> Prior to [[World War I]], he won many local races in Algeria and earned the nickname “the flying [[Berbers|Berber]]”. He was drafted into the 25th Infantry Regiment of the [[French Army]] in late 1918; however, the war ended soon after and he never saw combat.<ref name=”Terret” />{{rp|3}}

== Athletic career ==

== Athletic career ==

Because he had no family or job to return to in Algeria, El Ouafi chose to stay in the French Army for five more years. He was stationed in [[Occupation of the Rhineland|French-occupied Germany]]. While in Germany, a lieutenant arranged for him to compete in the 1923 military athletics championships in mainland France. The [[French Athletics Federation]] noticed his performance and requested he participate in the [[Athletics at the 1924 Summer Olympics – Men’s marathon|1924 Olympic marathon]]. He finished the marathon seventh overall and first among the French athletes.<ref name=”Terret” />{{rp|3–4}}

Because he had no family or job to return to in Algeria, El Ouafi chose to stay in the French Army for five more years. He was stationed in [[Occupation of the Rhineland|French-occupied Germany]]. While in Germany, a lieutenant arranged for him to compete in the 1923 military athletics championships in mainland France. The [[French Athletics Federation]] noticed his performance and requested he participate in the [[Athletics at the 1924 Summer Olympics – Men’s marathon|1924 Olympic marathon]]. He finished the marathon seventh overall and first among the French athletes.<ref name=”Terret” />{{rp|3–4}}

El Ouafi was illiterate, and he became a factory worker at [[Renault]] in [[Boulogne-Billancourt]] near Paris after finishing his military service. In Boulogne-Billancourt, he was trained by French athlete Louis Corle and won multiple long-distance races. He won the 1928 Paris-Melun Marathon, thus qualifying for the [[Athletics at the 1928 Summer Olympics – Men’s marathon|1928 Olympic marathon]].<ref name=”Terret” />{{rp|4}} In the [[1928 Summer Olympics]], he ran behind the leaders for the first three quarters of the race, overtaking them about 5 kilometers before the end. He finished first, 26 seconds ahead of the silver medalist [[Manuel Plaza]] from Chile.<ref name=”Olympedia” /> El Ouafi was the only representative of French athletics to win gold at the 1928 Olympics.<ref name=”Casden”>{{cite web |title=AHMED BOUGHERA EL OUAFI |url=https://casdenhistoiresport.fr/exposition/sportives-et-sportifs/ahmed-boughera-el-ouafi |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210227223503/https://casdenhistoiresport.fr/exposition/sportives-et-sportifs/ahmed-boughera-el-ouafi |archive-date=27 February 2021 |access-date=10 April 2024 |website=Casden Histoire Sport}}</ref> The [[Association of Road Racing Statisticians]] lists El Ouafi as the [[Marathon year rankings|best marathon runner]] of 1928.<ref>{{cite web |title=Yearly Rankings- Marathon |url=https://www.arrs.run/YR_Mara.htm |access-date=4 August 2025 |website=[[Association of Road Racing Statisticians]] |archive-date=2 December 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181202010510/https://arrs.run/YR_Mara.htm |url-status=live }}</ref>

El Ouafi was illiterate, and he became a factory worker at [[Renault]] in [[Boulogne-Billancourt]] near Paris after finishing his military service. In Boulogne-Billancourt, he was trained by French athlete Louis Corle and won multiple long-distance races. He won the 1928 Paris-Melun Marathon, thus qualifying for the [[Athletics at the 1928 Summer Olympics – Men’s marathon|1928 Olympic marathon]].<ref name=”Terret” />{{rp|4}} In the [[1928 Summer Olympics]], he ran behind the leaders for the first three quarters of the race, overtaking them about 5 kilometers before the end. He finished first, 26 seconds ahead of the silver medalist [[Manuel Plaza]] from Chile.<ref name=”Olympedia” /> El Ouafi was the only representative of French athletics to win gold at the 1928 Olympics.<ref name=”Casden”>{{cite web |title=AHMED BOUGHERA EL OUAFI |url=https://casdenhistoiresport.fr/exposition/sportives-et-sportifs/ahmed-boughera-el-ouafi |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210227223503/https://casdenhistoiresport.fr/exposition/sportives-et-sportifs/ahmed-boughera-el-ouafi |archive-date=27 February 2021 |access-date=10 April 2024 |website=Casden Histoire Sport}}</ref> The [[Association of Road Racing Statisticians]] lists El Ouafi as the [[Marathon year rankings|best marathon runner]] of 1928.<ref>{{cite web |title=Yearly Rankings- Marathon |url=https://www.arrs.run/YR_Mara.htm |access-date=4 August 2025 |=[[Association of Road Racing Statisticians]] |archive-date=2 December 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181202010510/https://arrs.run/YR_Mara.htm |url-status=live}}</ref>

Because he was an Algerian, French media downplayed his victory, treating it as unexpected and ironic. Some journalists, such as {{Ill|Victor Breyer|fr|Victor Breyer}}, presented El Ouafi’s victory as evidence of European French superiority over colonial minorities, as he was trained in mainland France.<ref name=”Terret” />{{rp|8}} In response to El Ouafi’s victory, the newspaper ”[[L’Humanité]]” sarcastically wrote, “Finally, a French victory!”, calling attention to the fact that most French people did not consider him to really be French.<ref name=”Guttmann”>{{Cite journal |last=Guttmann |first=Allen |date=2009 |title=Representing the Self and the Other: The 1928 Olympic Marathon |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26405253 |journal=Journal of Sport History |volume=36 |issue=1 |pages=73–75 |jstor=26405253 |issn=0094-1700}}</ref>{{rp|74}} He received more positive press in the United States, with [[Marcus Garvey]]’s newspaper ”[[Negro World]]” writing that El Ouafi was proof that “Scattered to the ends of the earth, and nowhere more numerous than in Africa, are men and women who, beyond a doubt, are capable of surpassing the best feats of [[Nordic race|Nordics]] on track or field”.<ref name=”Guttmann” />{{rp|75}} The American and Mexican newspapers ”[[New York Herald Tribune]]”, ”[[New York Times]]”, and ”[[El Universal (Mexico City)|El Universal]]” cited the performance of El Ouafi, as well as those of his competitors from Chile and Japan, as proof that [[Nordicism]] was scientifically baseless and that common beliefs of European ethnic superiority were false.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Dyreson |first=Mark |date=2009 |title=”Imperishable Sports History”? Interpreting El Ouafi in the United States and Mexico |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26405251 |journal=Journal of Sport History |volume=36 |issue=1 |pages=19–41 |jstor=26405251 |issn=0094-1700}}</ref>{{rp|21–22}}

Because he was an Algerian, French media downplayed his victory, treating it as unexpected and ironic. Some journalists, such as {{Ill|Victor Breyer|fr|Victor Breyer}}, presented El Ouafi’s victory as evidence of European French superiority over colonial minorities, as he was trained in mainland France.<ref name=”Terret” />{{rp|8}} In response to El Ouafi’s victory, the newspaper ”[[L’Humanité]]” sarcastically wrote, “Finally, a French victory!”, calling attention to the fact that most French people did not consider him to really be French.<ref name=”Guttmann”>{{Cite journal |last=Guttmann |first=Allen |date=2009 |title=Representing the Self and the Other: The 1928 Olympic Marathon |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26405253 |journal=Journal of Sport History |volume=36 |issue=1 |pages=73–75 |jstor=26405253 |issn=0094-1700}}</ref>{{rp|74}} He received more positive press in the United States, with [[Marcus Garvey]]’s newspaper ”[[Negro World]]” writing that El Ouafi was proof that “Scattered to the ends of the earth, and nowhere more numerous than in Africa, are men and women who, beyond a doubt, are capable of surpassing the best feats of [[Nordic race|Nordics]] on track or field”.<ref name=”Guttmann” />{{rp|75}} The American and Mexican newspapers ”[[New York Herald Tribune]]”, ”[[New York Times]]”, and ”[[El Universal (Mexico City)|El Universal]]” cited the performance of El Ouafi, as well as those of his competitors from Chile and Japan, as proof that [[Nordicism]] was scientifically baseless and that common beliefs of European ethnic superiority were false.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Dyreson |first=Mark |date=2009 |title=”Imperishable Sports History”? Interpreting El Ouafi in the United States and Mexico |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26405251 |journal=Journal of Sport History |volume=36 |issue=1 |pages=19–41 |jstor=26405251 |issn=0094-1700}}</ref>{{rp|21–22}}

After his surprise victory, El Ouafi was offered a chance to tour the United States. He ran ten marathons and ten 25-kilometer races in the United States over a period of five months between September 1928 and January 1929.<ref name=”Duval”>{{Cite web |last=Duval |first=Eloïse |title=Dans l’histoire olympique française, Boughéra El Ouafi de l’or à l’oubli |url=https://www.liberation.fr/sports/jeux-olympiques/dans-lhistoire-olympique-francaise-boughera-el-ouafi-de-lor-a-loubli-20240531_QPRGZYNX45GMZJO26NIKJANN4Y/ |access-date=5 August 2025 |website=Libération |language=fr}}</ref> However, the money he earned on this trip disqualified him as an amateur athlete, forcing him to leave the sport. El Ouafi’s disqualification was considered an example of “Siki syndrome”, in reference to when the [[French Boxing Federation]] disqualified the African boxer [[Battling Siki]] under dubious pretexts because he outperformed his white competitors.<ref name=”Terret” />{{rp|12}}

After his surprise victory, El Ouafi was offered a chance to tour the United States. He ran ten marathons and ten 25-kilometer races in the United States over a period of five months between September 1928 and January 1929.<ref name=”Duval”>{{Cite |=Duval |=Eloïse |title=Dans l’histoire olympique française, Boughéra El Ouafi de l’or à l’oubli |url=https://www.liberation.fr/sports/jeux-olympiques/dans-lhistoire-olympique-francaise-boughera-el-ouafi-de-lor-a-loubli-20240531_QPRGZYNX45GMZJO26NIKJANN4Y/ |access-date=5 August 2025 |=Libération |language=fr}}</ref> However, the money he earned on this trip disqualified him as an amateur athlete, forcing him to leave the sport. El Ouafi’s disqualification was considered an example of “Siki syndrome”, in reference to when the [[French Boxing Federation]] disqualified the African boxer [[Battling Siki]] under dubious pretexts because he outperformed his white competitors.<ref name=”Terret” />{{rp|12}}

== Later life and death ==

== Later life and death ==

Line 44: Line 44:

There are differing accounts of the circumstances surrounding El Ouafi’s death. According to one account, on 18 October 1959, El Ouafi attended a family meeting at 10 Landis Street in [[Saint-Denis, Seine-Saint-Denis|Saint-Denis]] to discuss the inheritance of his nephew. For reasons unknown, the meeting escalated into violence, and El Ouafi was shot and killed.<ref name=”Terret” /> A different account says that he was assassinated by the Algerian [[National Liberation Front (Algeria)|National Liberation Front]] (FLN) because he refused to support the group.<ref name=”Olympedia” /> His great-grandniece, Jasmine Zeroug, has stated that the circumstances of his death are not entirely known, but that the FLN was likely responsible.<ref name=”Dendoune” /> He was buried at the [[Bobigny cemetery]] in a funeral paid for by the [[French National Olympic and Sports Committee]].<ref name=”Terret”>{{Cite journal |last1=Terret |first1=Thierry |last2=Roger |first2=Anne |date=2009 |title=Managing Colonial Contradictions: French Attitudes toward El Ouafi’s 1928 Olympic Victory |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26405250 |journal=Journal of Sport History |volume=36 |issue=1 |pages=3–18 |jstor=26405250 |issn=0094-1700}}</ref>{{rp|13}}

There are differing accounts of the circumstances surrounding El Ouafi’s death. According to one account, on 18 October 1959, El Ouafi attended a family meeting at 10 Landis Street in [[Saint-Denis, Seine-Saint-Denis|Saint-Denis]] to discuss the inheritance of his nephew. For reasons unknown, the meeting escalated into violence, and El Ouafi was shot and killed.<ref name=”Terret” /> A different account says that he was assassinated by the Algerian [[National Liberation Front (Algeria)|National Liberation Front]] (FLN) because he refused to support the group.<ref name=”Olympedia” /> His great-grandniece, Jasmine Zeroug, has stated that the circumstances of his death are not entirely known, but that the FLN was likely responsible.<ref name=”Dendoune” /> He was buried at the [[Bobigny cemetery]] in a funeral paid for by the [[French National Olympic and Sports Committee]].<ref name=”Terret”>{{Cite journal |last1=Terret |first1=Thierry |last2=Roger |first2=Anne |date=2009 |title=Managing Colonial Contradictions: French Attitudes toward El Ouafi’s 1928 Olympic Victory |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26405250 |journal=Journal of Sport History |volume=36 |issue=1 |pages=3–18 |jstor=26405250 |issn=0094-1700}}</ref>{{rp|13}}

El Ouafi was largely ignored and forgotten in France during his lifetime. He had received more coverage from the American press in the few months he toured the United States than from the French press in his entire life, although he gained some recognition in the 1990s when the newspaper ”[[L’Humanité]]” mentioned him as an example of a North African successfully [[Integration of immigrants|integrating]] into European French society.<ref name=”Terret” />{{rp|8, 13}} In the 1990s, a stadium in [[La Courneuve]] and an avenue near the [[Stade de France]] were named in his honor.<ref name=”Duval” /> The [[Louafi Bouguera Olympic Bridge]] in the [[Olympic Village (Paris)|Paris Olympic Village]] was named in his honor in 2024.<ref>{{cite news |date=2 December 2024 |title=Le pont du Village olympique deviendra le pont Louafi Bouguera, en hommage au premier Franco-Algérien médaillé d’or olympique |url=https://www.beurfm.net/le-pont-du-village-olympique-deviendra-le-pont-louafi-bouguera-en-hommage-au-premier-franco-algerien-medaille-d-or-olympique |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250223032337/https://www.beurfm.net/le-pont-du-village-olympique-deviendra-le-pont-louafi-bouguera-en-hommage-au-premier-franco-algerien-medaille-d-or-olympique |archive-date=23 February 2025 |access-date=21 December 2024 |publisher=[[Beur FM]] |language=fr}}</ref> [[Stéphane Troussel]] stated that the bridge was named “to honor the memory of this largely unknown Franco-Algerian figure, whose name has been deliberately erased by discrimination, racism and colonization”.<ref>{{Cite web |date=7 December 2024 |title=À Saint-Denis, un pont pour enfin se souvenir du marathonien Louafi Bouguera, champion olympique oublié |url=https://www.leparisien.fr/sports/a-saint-denis-un-pont-pour-enfin-se-souvenir-du-marathonien-louafi-bouguera-champion-olympique-oublie-07-12-2024-HMCLTMYHD5FRFKUHIAUAWKMJ7Q.php |access-date=4 August 2025 |website=leparisien.fr |language=fr-FR |archive-date=23 December 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241223114515/https://www.leparisien.fr/sports/a-saint-denis-un-pont-pour-enfin-se-souvenir-du-marathonien-louafi-bouguera-champion-olympique-oublie-07-12-2024-HMCLTMYHD5FRFKUHIAUAWKMJ7Q.php |url-status=live }}</ref>

El Ouafi was largely ignored and forgotten in France during his lifetime. He had received more coverage from the American press in the few months he toured the United States than from the French press in his entire life, although he gained some recognition in the 1990s when the newspaper ”[[L’Humanité]]” mentioned him as an example of a North African successfully [[Integration of immigrants|integrating]] into European French society.<ref name=”Terret” />{{rp|8, 13}} In the 1990s, a stadium in [[La Courneuve]] and an avenue near the [[Stade de France]] were named in his honor.<ref name=”Duval” /> The [[Louafi Bouguera Olympic Bridge]] in the [[Olympic Village (Paris)|Paris Olympic Village]] was named in his honor in 2024.<ref>{{cite news |date=2 December 2024 |title=Le pont du Village olympique deviendra le pont Louafi Bouguera, en hommage au premier Franco-Algérien médaillé d’or olympique |url=https://www.beurfm.net/le-pont-du-village-olympique-deviendra-le-pont-louafi-bouguera-en-hommage-au-premier-franco-algerien-medaille-d-or-olympique |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250223032337/https://www.beurfm.net/le-pont-du-village-olympique-deviendra-le-pont-louafi-bouguera-en-hommage-au-premier-franco-algerien-medaille-d-or-olympique |archive-date=23 February 2025 |access-date=21 December 2024 |publisher=[[Beur FM]] |language=fr}}</ref> [[Stéphane Troussel]] stated that the bridge was named “to honor the memory of this largely unknown Franco-Algerian figure, whose name has been deliberately erased by discrimination, racism and colonization”.<ref>{{Cite |date=7 December 2024 |title=À Saint-Denis, un pont pour enfin se souvenir du marathonien Louafi Bouguera, champion olympique oublié |url=https://www.leparisien.fr/sports/a-saint-denis-un-pont-pour-enfin-se-souvenir-du-marathonien-louafi-bouguera-champion-olympique-oublie-07-12-2024-HMCLTMYHD5FRFKUHIAUAWKMJ7Q.php |access-date=4 August 2025 |= |language=fr-FR |archive-date=23 December 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241223114515/https://www.leparisien.fr/sports/a-saint-denis-un-pont-pour-enfin-se-souvenir-du-marathonien-louafi-bouguera-champion-olympique-oublie-07-12-2024-HMCLTMYHD5FRFKUHIAUAWKMJ7Q.php |url-status=live}}</ref>

==See also==

==See also==

French Algerian marathon runner (1903–1959)

Ahmed Boughera El Ouafi[a] (Arabic: أحمد بوقرة الوافي; 1903[b] – 18 October 1959) was a French Algerian marathon runner who represented France at the 1924 and 1928 Summer Olympics, winning gold in the latter.[1] He was largely unacknowledged in his lifetime, facing discrimination in France due to his Algerian origin, but received posthumous recognition.

Boughera El Ouafi was born in the town of Ouled Djellal in French Algeria in 1903.[2] Prior to World War I, he won many local races in Algeria and earned the nickname “the flying Berber“. He was drafted into the 25th Infantry Regiment of the French Army in late 1918; however, the war ended soon after and he never saw combat.[3]: 3 

Because he had no family or job to return to in Algeria, El Ouafi chose to stay in the French Army for five more years. He was stationed in French-occupied Germany. While in Germany, a lieutenant arranged for him to compete in the 1923 military athletics championships in mainland France. The French Athletics Federation noticed his performance and requested he participate in the 1924 Olympic marathon. He finished the marathon seventh overall and first among the French athletes.[3]: 3–4 

El Ouafi was illiterate, and he became a factory worker at Renault in Boulogne-Billancourt near Paris after finishing his military service. In Boulogne-Billancourt, he was trained by French athlete Louis Corle and won multiple long-distance races. He won the 1928 Paris-Melun Marathon, thus qualifying for the 1928 Olympic marathon.[3]: 4  In the 1928 Summer Olympics, he ran behind the leaders for the first three quarters of the race, overtaking them about 5 kilometers before the end. He finished first, 26 seconds ahead of the silver medalist Manuel Plaza from Chile.[1] El Ouafi was the only representative of French athletics to win gold at the 1928 Olympics.[4] The Association of Road Racing Statisticians lists El Ouafi as the best marathon runner of 1928.[5]

Because he was an Algerian, French media downplayed his victory, treating it as unexpected and ironic. Some journalists, such as Victor Breyer [fr], presented El Ouafi’s victory as evidence of European French superiority over colonial minorities, as he was trained in mainland France.[3]: 8  In response to El Ouafi’s victory, the newspaper L’Humanité sarcastically wrote, “Finally, a French victory!”, calling attention to the fact that most French people did not consider him to really be French.[6]: 74  He received more positive press in the United States, with Marcus Garvey‘s newspaper Negro World writing that El Ouafi was proof that “Scattered to the ends of the earth, and nowhere more numerous than in Africa, are men and women who, beyond a doubt, are capable of surpassing the best feats of Nordics on track or field”.[6]: 75  The American and Mexican newspapers New York Herald Tribune, New York Times, and El Universal cited the performance of El Ouafi, as well as those of his competitors from Chile and Japan, as proof that Nordicism was scientifically baseless and that common beliefs of European ethnic superiority were false.[7]: 21–22 

After his surprise victory, El Ouafi was offered a chance to tour the United States. He ran ten marathons and ten 25-kilometer races in the United States over a period of five months between September 1928 and January 1929.[8] However, the money he earned on this trip disqualified him as an amateur athlete, forcing him to leave the sport. El Ouafi’s disqualification was considered an example of “Siki syndrome”, in reference to when the French Boxing Federation disqualified the African boxer Battling Siki under dubious pretexts because he outperformed his white competitors.[3]: 12 

Later life and death

[edit]

A view of a footbridge over a river. On one end of the bridge are the apartment buildings of the Olympic Village.
The Louafi Bouguera Olympic Bridge was named in his honor in 2024.

El Ouafi used the money he earned in the United States to buy a café in Paris. This business soon faced bankruptcy. He worked various jobs such as waiting and manual labor before becoming unemployed. His destitution was met with indifference from the French public.[3]: 12  El Ouafi remained forgotten by the public until the 1956 Summer Olympics, when the Algerian runner Alain Mimoun also won the marathon. Reporters went to seek out the other Algerian who had won 28 years earlier and found him in poverty.[4] When Mimoun returned to France, he was invited by René Coty to the Élysée Palace and he invited El Ouafi as his guest. Mimoun gave El Ouafi some money and helped him get a job as a doorkeeper at a stadium.[3]: 13 

There are differing accounts of the circumstances surrounding El Ouafi’s death. According to one account, on 18 October 1959, El Ouafi attended a family meeting at 10 Landis Street in Saint-Denis to discuss the inheritance of his nephew. For reasons unknown, the meeting escalated into violence, and El Ouafi was shot and killed.[3] A different account says that he was assassinated by the Algerian National Liberation Front (FLN) because he refused to support the group.[1] His great-grandniece, Jasmine Zeroug, has stated that the circumstances of his death are not entirely known, but that the FLN was likely responsible.[2] He was buried at the Bobigny cemetery in a funeral paid for by the French National Olympic and Sports Committee.[3]: 13 

El Ouafi was largely ignored and forgotten in France during his lifetime. He had received more coverage from the American press in the few months he toured the United States than from the French press in his entire life, although he gained some recognition in the 1990s when the newspaper L’Humanité mentioned him as an example of a North African successfully integrating into European French society.[3]: 8, 13  In the 1990s, a stadium in La Courneuve and an avenue near the Stade de France were named in his honor.[8] The Louafi Bouguera Olympic Bridge in the Paris Olympic Village was named in his honor in 2024.[9] Stéphane Troussel stated that the bridge was named “to honor the memory of this largely unknown Franco-Algerian figure, whose name has been deliberately erased by discrimination, racism and colonization”.[10]

  1. ^ His name is variously transcribed as “El Ouafi” or “Louafi” based on the Algerian Arabic pronunciation.[1] The order of his names is occasionally swapped in French.[2]
  2. ^ Sources vary on the year of his birth,[3]: 13  but his great-grandniece claims that he was born in 1903.[2]
  1. ^ a b c d “Boughera El Ouafi”. Olympedia. Archived from the original on 12 March 2025. Retrieved 19 September 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d Dendoune, Nadir (2 November 2021). “JO 1928. La détermination de Jasmine pour sortir de l’oubli son grand-oncle, vainqueur du marathon”. Le Courrier de l’Atlas (in French). Archived from the original on 18 April 2025. Retrieved 5 August 2025.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Terret, Thierry; Roger, Anne (2009). “Managing Colonial Contradictions: French Attitudes toward El Ouafi’s 1928 Olympic Victory”. Journal of Sport History. 36 (1): 3–18. ISSN 0094-1700. JSTOR 26405250.
  4. ^ a b “AHMED BOUGHERA EL OUAFI”. Casden Histoire Sport. Archived from the original on 27 February 2021. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
  5. ^ “Yearly Rankings- Marathon”. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Archived from the original on 2 December 2018. Retrieved 4 August 2025.
  6. ^ a b Guttmann, Allen (2009). “Representing the Self and the Other: The 1928 Olympic Marathon”. Journal of Sport History. 36 (1): 73–75. ISSN 0094-1700. JSTOR 26405253.
  7. ^ Dyreson, Mark (2009). “Imperishable Sports History”? Interpreting El Ouafi in the United States and Mexico”. Journal of Sport History. 36 (1): 19–41. ISSN 0094-1700. JSTOR 26405251.
  8. ^ a b Duval, Eloïse. “Dans l’histoire olympique française, Boughéra El Ouafi de l’or à l’oubli”. Libération (in French). Retrieved 5 August 2025.
  9. ^ “Le pont du Village olympique deviendra le pont Louafi Bouguera, en hommage au premier Franco-Algérien médaillé d’or olympique” (in French). Beur FM. 2 December 2024. Archived from the original on 23 February 2025. Retrieved 21 December 2024.
  10. ^ “À Saint-Denis, un pont pour enfin se souvenir du marathonien Louafi Bouguera, champion olympique oublié”. Le Parisien (in French). 7 December 2024. Archived from the original on 23 December 2024. Retrieved 4 August 2025.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top