This April in London, the sporting world witnessed a montage loaded with meaning. With Buckingham Palace in the background, Sifan Hassan, a 30-year-old Ethiopian, who had sought asylum in The Netherlands when she was 15, strode her way to an unlikely win in the London Marathon. The image captured the power of sport to bring together different countries and cultures, and to provide a life of purpose and recognition to refugees. Details of Hassan’s migration from Ethiopia to The Netherlands are sketchy. What is known is that it happened in 2008. After arrival, Hassan stayed at a refugee centre for minors for eight months, crying at night, feeling as if she was in prison. But running was her goal and it liberated her. Once her spark was spotted by coaches, one thing led to another. Now Hassan is a phenomenon of track and field, with two golds at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics (5,000 m, 10,000 m) and a bronze (1,500 m), and a reputation for turning convention on its head. The London Marathon, for example, was her first attempt at the 42 km event. She had a strained left hip and was fasting due to Ramadan. Yet she won.