It was less than two years ago that I first met the
near-mythical Micah True, also known as “Caballo Blanco,” Spanish for White
Horse, and the central character of the bestselling book, Born to Run: A
Hidden Tribe, Superathletes, and the Greatest Race the World has Never Seen.
He recently made headlines when he was found dead four
days after disappearing during a routine solo trail run in the Gila Wilderness
of New Mexico. Among the search party was Christopher McDougall, the author of
“Born to Run.” McDougall’s original curiosity about the elusive Micah, who
chose to live among a reclusive small tribe in Mexico, inspired his book and
brought him literary acclaim.
I met Micah True in a roundabout way through pack-burro
racing, Colorado’s indigenous and unusual sport, in which human competitors run
up and down mountain passes alongside burros. A mutual friend talked Micah into
racing a burro in an upcoming event at Leadville, and I offered to provide the
burro.
Micah was open to new adventures, and everyone he met
quickly became his friend and potential running partner. We met at a friend’s
ranch and went for a run with a burro called Spike. I still remember the
laughter as the black burro got away from the White Horse a couple of times on
the downhill. We quickly became friends, and he ended up running in two burro
races.
Little did I know that within two years, Micah would
become the first person I’ve ever known — and considered a friend — whose death
would be reported as major news. He would be eulogized in public memorial
services across the country, and the world would learn perhaps more about this
remarkable person after his death than had been reported during the 58 years of
his life. What’s unfortunate is that while many writers tended to dwell on the
how and why of his death, they didn’t tell more about the how and why of his
life.
It was widely reported, for example, that Micah was the
race director for the Copper Canyon Ultra Marathon in Mexico. True, but rarely
has there been mention of the fact that he organized the race as a benefit for
the tribal people who inhabit the area. The race brings in 100,000 pounds of
staple corn for the Tarahumara, and $14,000 in prizes. Every runner who
finishes the race is awarded 500 pounds of corn. Using his fame from “Born to Run,”
Caballo traveled the United States — and indeed the world — on his “Talking
Horse Tour,” raising awareness about the plight of the Tarahumara, one of the
world’s last indigenous running cultures.
The Raramuri, which roughly translates as “Running
People,” evolved as runners in order to travel quickly through their rugged
homeland, get messages between villages, and hunt. They continue to celebrate
this tradition through ceremony and competition.
Today, the Tarahumara are feeling the harsh encroachment
of modern culture, with its violent drug wars and intensive mining and logging.
The tribe’s love of running, Micah believed, was the thin thread that still
held the culture together. One writer characterized Micah as the only person
who could possibly help the Tarahumara. “Born to Run,” tells the story of Micah, beginning with
his career as a champion prizefighter living in Boulder, Colo., to his virtual
disappearance from society. He’d first become acquainted with Raramuri runners
at the Leadville Trail 100 ultramarathon in the 1990s. Shortly thereafter, he
more or less vanished into Copper Canyon, living in a mud-and-stone hut and
spending his days running among the Tarahumara.
Though he took exception to some of the descriptions in Born to Run, the book’s release in 2009 drew Micah out of his seclusion in
the depths of the canyons. It gave him a sense of mission and the visibility
that he needed to help him make a difference. His relative fame, however, never
went to his head. “Just trying to keep it real,” he told me. “Run free.”
He stayed true to that credo, living practically out of
the back of his truck, traveling to speaking engagements and running, always
running, on behalf of the Tarahumara.
How many of us are willing to turn our passion and good
fortune into a lifelong mission of helping others? How many of us will die
doing what we love in a place that we love? It seems that Micah True found the
perfect trail to the other side. Those of us who had the good fortune to know
Micah True, either personally or through his legend as related in “Born to
Run,” can celebrate his life and honor his message.
Run free, Caballo Blanco!
Hal Walter is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a
service of High Country News (hcn.org). He is a writer in Colorado’s Wet
Mountains.

