Ahmed El Ouafi Boughéra (Arabic: أحمد بوقرة الوافي) is a French athlete and worker born October 15, 1898 in Ouled Djellal in Algeria and died October 18, 1959 in Saint-Denis in France. In 1928, he became the first indigenous African athlete to win an Olympic medal and even more so to be an Olympic champion by winning the marathon at the Summer Games in Amsterdam. His career made him a “symbol of the athlete forgotten by history” .
Ahmed Boughera El Ouafi joins the French army and crosses the Mediterranean to participate in the Great War. In 1923, a lieutenant, having noticed his athletic talents, offered him the opportunity to take part in his first long-distance race, during which he distinguished himself. Very quickly, he progressed through the events, becoming French marathon champion in 1924, before participating in the Paris Olympic Games the same year and finishing seventh in the main event in 2 hours and 54 minutes. As the International Colonial Exhibition looms in Paris, the apogee of French domination over its overseas possessions, a hitherto unknown "Algerian native" by the name of Ahmed Boughera El Ouafi imposes himself against all expectations during the prestigious marathon event, August 5, 1928 in Amsterdam. On the starting line, no one bet on the one wearing bib 71 with the blue, white and red rooster. Moreover, at the tenth kilometer he is only in twentieth place. However, at kilometer 32, he comes back and is in ambush in third place. Then, five kilometers…