Kathrine Switzer beschreibt ihre Eindrücke vom Österreichischen dm Frauenlauf 2005 in eigenen Worten: Gekürzter Text aus"Worlds Apart: Women We Love" von Kathrine Switzer The actual site of the Austrian Women's Run is held in the Prater, a huge park smack in the middle of Vienna, a city of such baroque and rococo intensity that it reminds me of a whipped cream cake. It is an ideal location: pancake flat, shady and on soft asphalt, the one loop 5K and two-loop 10K races are perfect for fast times, spectators, superb organizational control, and best of all as a venue for the day-long festival that follows. All of which Ilse Dippmann envisioned years ago when she had a dream of organizing a women's only race in Austria and the determination to do it and build it every year. Dippmann, a schoolteacher and 3:15 marathoner, several times ran the Chicago and New York City marathons, but what impressed her the most was the original women's-only race, the New York Mini Marathon, a highly-spirited 10K race around Central Park. With ideas from these events, Dippmann started her first event with a field of 342 women. Every year she added a new component, building carefully, keeping quality paramount. The Austrian Women's Run now has become a full-time professional effort, with many layers of sponsorship, entertainment (7 different bands), catering (6 different beer stalls!), and technical support. Now it is the largest race in Austria after the Vienna Spring Marathon. "Every year our race has grown hugely but I was afraid to hope for 10,000", Dippmann said. "That day has now come, and I'm so happy." I was too! Dippmann asked me to wear bib number 10,000 in honor of the landmark occasion. The race is huge and slick, but intensely personal as women from all over Austria came together for their annual rite of racing, jogging or Nordic walking. It was brilliant running past banks of wildly cheering men - a sort of reverse of the Boston Marathon's Wellesley College. "Many times over the years I wondered if I should give up this race, if all the work is worth it", said Dippmann. "This year, I knew we were right to persevere. We have moved to the next higher level. Sometimes you get too close to the work to see how wonderful the event is and how significant it is for so many women. In the end, you know you're changing their lives and they will pass on this vision, too." |