Nineteen-year-old Mariam Farid is one of Qatar’s most promising young female athletes with high ambitions of achieving success on the world stage. The full-time university student and member of Qatar’s national athletics team wants to be an inspiration to young females from Qatar and across the region, and to challenge perceptions of Qatari women’s participation in sports. 
Mariam’s immediate focus is on the upcoming Doha Diamond League on May 5 where she will be competing in the 100m and 4x100m relay. The young sprinter and multiple national record-holder cannot wait to compete in front of a home crowd amongst the sport’s global superstars and believes that this will provide an added boost to her performance.
“Participating in front of this huge crowd, in front of my people and everyone I know, and in my home country motivates me to run faster and show the best that I can do. It is something I have to be very proud of,” she said yesterday.
However, for Mariam it is more than just her personal performance that is important at the Diamond League – she also feels that hosting the event in Doha provides an important opportunity to shine a spotlight on women’s sport in Qatar.
“We have to show the younger generation that Arab women in Qatar and across the GCC can do sports and that there are girls from Qatar playing athletics and competing in the Diamond League.  We do train every day, and we work hard to achieve our goals.”
Mariam’s most recent success came at the GCC Women’s Games in Doha, where she claimed silver and bronze medals. She feels that the all-female event is very important for the region because “it shows how girls are improving and how their countries are empowering them to come and play sport internationally”. 
Whilst not her best result in terms of podium finishes, Mariam accounts her fourth place finish at the 2014 West Asian Championships when she was just 16 as her favourite achievement because “it was a very good result for my age that year and it motivated me to train harder, work harder and do better.”
A highly ambitious athlete, this motivation spurred Mariam to dream of one day becoming the best in the world. “My biggest ambition is to be a world champion and an Olympic Champion. It is a matter of training hard and believing in yourself”. 
This ambition is supported wholeheartedly by her family, a factor she sees as crucial to her success and something that helps to encourage her to achieve her dreams.
“My family is very supportive in athletics and me going to training every day. I think without their support, I wouldn’t be in the national team. My father always says to me, ‘one day you are going to be a World Champion’ and he motivates me to train and to work hard.”
An ultimate dream of Mariam’s is to compete in her sport’s biggest event in front of a home crowd when the Doha hosts the World Championships in Athletics in 2019: “I’m waiting for this day to compete in 2019 here in Qatar because it is something I worked hard for”. 
Mariam is now a student at Northwestern University in Doha where she is studying Communications whilst juggling two hours of athletics training every day, except Fridays. 
She feels that this is possible thanks to the support from both her university and the Qatar Olympic Committee. “Whenever I have an important competition, my university always supports me, and whenever I have exams I have the support of the Olympic Committee”.
Despite the huge pressures that come with such a gruelling schedule, it has become a “lifestyle” for Mariam and she feels that “nothing is hard when you enjoy doing something”. It is this passion for athletics and her ambitions that drive her daily determination and commitment.
“What makes me wake up every day and go to training is that I have a goal - I want to achieve something and I want to build a legacy. I want to change and improve women’s sport and I want to make Qatar proud. I love athletics because it teaches you to be independent, it improves your self-confidence, and it makes you responsible as a person.”

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