Abel Rivera wears his medals after ending the LA Marathon on Sunday in Century Metropolis.
Elise Hu
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Elise Hu
FIRE SURVIVOR COMPETES IN L.A. MARATHON
Burn zones from probably the most catastrophic wildfires in Los Angeles historical past have yet to be fully cleaned up, and 1000’s of Angelenos stay displaced. However on Sunday, folks turned out in droves alongside the 26.2 mile route of the Los Angeles Marathon, to cheer on greater than 21,000 runners who took half. It marked a reaffirmation of vitality in a neighborhood that endured catastrophe only a few months in the past.
Amongst those that completed the race was 15-year-old hearth evacuee Abel Rivera, whose residence in Altadena burned down in January. Rivera is on his highschool operating staff, and competed within the LA Marathon for the primary time final yr. For each Rivera and the Los Angeles neighborhood, the occasion was a present of resilience within the aftermath of tragedy.
‘Fifteen years of my life is principally gone’
Rivera misplaced virtually all the things when the Eaton hearth leveled his residence on January seventh.
“I misplaced a home and not likely the best way I needed to. I did not wish to depart it behind that approach,” Rivera tells NPR.
NPR listeners could keep in mind Rivera from a piece on the radio in mid-January, simply days after the fires tore via LA.
“Fifteen years of my life is principally gone,” he stated on the time. “All the things that I’ve completed, each single medal I’ve, each single assortment – all the things I had is gone.”
Abel Rivera and his mom, Lupe Melchor, pin on their race bibs at Dodger Stadium, the place to begin of the 26.2 mile LA Marathon.
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Elise Hu
All the things, together with his prized medal for ending final yr’s marathon, and his trainers. When listeners discovered this element, some reached out to supply him their very own 2024 medals. The McCourt Basis, which places on the marathon, supplied a substitute upon studying of Rivera’s story.
Within the aftermath of the tragedy, Rivera relied on operating as a solution to preserve calm and centered. Aside from a month-long pause on account of issues about air quality, he and greater than a dozen different teammates from Pasadena’s Blair Excessive Faculty continued coaching and collaborating in shorter highway races to organize for Sunday’s large occasion.
Rivera anticipated the run – ranging from LA’s Dodger Stadium, and winding via downtown, previous Metropolis Corridor, Hollywood landmarks, and down Beverly Hills’ Rodeo Drive – to be painful.
“I feel for the primary 10 miles, I am going to most likely be alright, then mile 11-12 I am going to most likely be struggling. I might say 20-24 I am going to most likely be hurting quite a bit,” Rivera stated shortly earlier than the race.
However not like the emotional ache he is endured on account of the fires – this can be a sort of ache he will get to decide on.
‘Doing it for our metropolis’
Rivera is not the one scholar from his operating staff who was personally affected by the blazes earlier this yr. Two different college students from Blair Excessive Faculty operating membership additionally misplaced their houses, in keeping with their instructor and coach Eric Glenn, and half the staff needed to be evacuated from their houses for weeks. Their college district, Pasadena Unified, closed its campuses – additionally for weeks – since several schools within the district burned.

Contributors put together for the beginning of the Los Angeles Marathon Sunday, in Los Angeles.
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Eric Thayer/AP
Glenn stated it was rewarding to hit the streets of Los Angeles as a staff: “It simply seems like we’re doing it for our metropolis, you already know?”
Rivera and his teammates began the marathon simply previous seven within the morning. He ran side-by-side together with his mom, Lupe Melchor, for the primary half. And within the early afternoon on Sunday, after about six hours of operating, Rivera crossed the end line to earn his second LA Marathon finisher medal in a row.
“It seems like a milestone,” he stated on the end line. “And operating the marathon is nostalgic. It jogs my memory of occasions earlier than I had the hearth.”
His mother completed about 50 minutes later.
“We did not end collectively, however we did it,” she stated, after giving her son a hug and strolling via the finisher’s space arm-in-arm with him.
Marathon runners wind down Hollywood Boulevard on Sunday, in entrance of Grauman’s Chinese language Theater, a well-liked vacationer landmark and the positioning of many movie premieres.
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Elise Hu
Each runner on Blair Excessive Faculty’s marathon staff completed, together with Coach Glenn. In all, about 3,000 Los Angeles space center and highschool college students ran the LA Marathon, as a part of a non-profit program known as Students Run LA.
“They simply did a tough factor whereas going via a tough factor. And it is actually a testomony to their resilience and it is tremendous inspirational,” Glenn stated.
Cleanup and rebuilding is only getting started in Los Angeles. Rivera and his household are nonetheless with no everlasting residence. However they don’t seem to be with out hope.
“I really feel actually good about myself, that it doesn’t matter what, I can all the time push via,” Rivera stated.
It is a reminder of resilience, and the capability to maintain going, even when it actually hurts.