Athletics

Norton, Morans running to raise cash for Maasai

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Two of the Maasai Morans who will be taking part in tomorrow’s New York City Marathon during training with team-mates in the Chyulu Hills. The Morans, who will be running to raise funds for the Maasai Wilderness Conservation Trust, will be in a team led by American actor Edward Norton.

Two of the Maasai Morans who will be taking part in tomorrow’s New York City Marathon during training with team-mates in the Chyulu Hills. The Morans, who will be running to raise funds for the Maasai Wilderness Conservation Trust, will be in a team led by American actor Edward Norton. 


Posted  Friday, October 30  2009 at  22:00

NEW YORK

American actor Edward Norton is sitting next to a Maasai warrior describing how he greases up his chest to prevent his nipples from bleeding.

The warrior is Samson Parashina, 32, President of the Maasai Wilderness Conservation Trust. On Norton’s other side is Luca Belpietro, the Trust’s Italian founder. Norton is President of the Board and is discussing preventative measures taken as he prepares for his first marathon.

The three are part of a 30-person team, including three Maasai, running Sunday’s New York Marathon to raise money for the MWCT, dedicated to protecting the Maasai’s tribal homeland.

Norton’s introduction to the MWCT came as a tourist eight years ago on a trip to Kenya to climb Kilimanjaro. Since then he’s returned with friends and family (his sister works in Uganda and Rwanda and his father is heavily involved with the Nature Conservancy).

“People were so consistently blown away by what these guys were doing,” Norton told Huffington Post of the Trust.

More reliable way

“It was a very pioneering approach to community-based conservation. Over time I started to feel that even though it’s a very specific, small project, it has real relevance as a model to conservation globally.”

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But it relied on tourism.

“I thought it would be great if this was funded in a more reliable way,” Norton continued. “I thought that’s what I could actually play a role in doing. Connect the good work they’re doing with pipelines of support that were more reliable.”

After years of cocktail parties and dinner parties, Norton wanted to do more.

“I’m pretty sure Samson thought all people do here is have dinner parties,” Norton said. “The idea of running the marathon was something a lot more guys could engage with and participate in.”

While Norton did not initially plan to run, everyone assumed he was participating. “Suddenly it was like, oh god, I have to do this,” Norton says he realised. “But it’s been fun.”

Bloodly nipples

Training started in June and has taken Norton to Kenya and back, “It’s very difficult. It has its plateaus. Getting to 12 miles you’re like, this is ridiculous, I’m never going to get to 26. Then you get to 15 and you think you’re never going to get to 18. Then you get to 20, and you’re kind of in striking distance.”

And while he’s suffered shin splints, Norton has thus far avoided the previously-mentioned marathon scourge: bloody nipples.

“That horrified me so much when I heard about it that when I was running like, three miles, I was Vaseline-ing and band-aiding my chest.,” Norton said as he made phantom circular strokes around his chest. “I was like, that is not going to happen to me.”

In addition to training, the private Norton started tweeting. After talking to Ashton Kutcher about money he raised via Twitter for malaria nets, Norton started a Twitter account that now has over 120,000 followers and has helped raise hundreds of thousands of dollars. (Agencies)