Olympic Refugee Team Makes World History 2016 has been a year of progress for politics, social movements and especially sports as this year in Rio de Janeiro athletes raining from Syria to South Sudan put together a team of refugees to compete for the first time in history. They are coming to Rio in a group of 10 with nothing but their athletic abilities and dreams for gold. Only recently were they forged after narrowing down a list of 43 athletes to compete under the Olympic flag, as they walked into the opening ceremony before Brazil near the end of the processions. Athletes on the team joined by fleeing conflicts currently raging in their countries of origin. For Rami Anis, a Syrian swimmer living in Belgium was the first
The video on “the Hidden History of the Olympic Games” provides intriguing revelations that the Olympic Games are driven by astonishing propaganda associated with international rivalry and social struggles (Poulton, 2012). The video clarifies that Olympic Games have preserved the colonial strategies and operations in most host nations and cities by the organizing bodies (Poulton, 2012). This has caused the production of unique ceremonies and symbolisms while supporting the encroachment of thieving indigenous lands in host colonies. For instance, Germany used the event to advocate the myth of Aryan racial dominance and physical prowess in the 1936 Berlin games. The German artists emerged to idealize athletes through sculptures and significant forms with muscle tones and physically fit features (Mason, 2012). The significance of the Munich massacre is that retribution is harshly critical in political agendas. This caused a loss of potential athlete skills where about 11 athletes were demised. A rivalry was triggered from the occasion even though the authorities were informed of terror attacks (Mason, 2012).
As a sporting mega-event, the Olympic Games have numerous social impacts on the people, not only on those from the host country, but on individuals all over the globe.
a cook in the nearby city of Elis. Once they expanded the Olympics to a 5-day event they started
will begin in nine months. Among those athletes is one whose story will be told for generations to
In 2013 I attended my first special olympics event, I was so nervous because I had never been around special needs kids and didn’t know how to act or treat them, but the kids made it so easy. Now each year I attend at least four special olympics events and I have the amazing opportunity to travel with the kids to Special Olympics State at Troy University for a weekend. My aunt, Nan Franks is who I thank for introducing me to the sweetest kids I have ever met and also who I thank for giving me so many opportunities to spend time with them. Watching the boys and girls grow and excel over the years gives me an amazing feeling, watching them finally grasp something or finally learning how to say a word or winning a prize at special olympics, I
On August 3, 2016, three days prior to the start of the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio, the International Olympic Committee honored the fallen athletes for the first time since the massacre.
In the August 8th and 15th issue of the New Yorker, Mark Ulriksen vividly outlines the conflict that the 2016 Olympics faced in Rio de Janeiro. Typically, a track star in the
"The Olympics are a wonderful metaphor for world cooperation, the kind of international competition that's wholesome and healthy, an interplay between countries that represents the best in all of us,” said John Williams, the composer for theme music for the Olympics (8). The Olympic Games are international sports festivals that began in ancient Greece. The first ancient Olympics can be traced back to 776 BC when people held this religious festival to honour Zeus, the father of all the Greek gods and goddesses. The participants were male citizens from Greece, and these athletes participated in only one event — foot race. Unfortunately, this ancient Olympics did not last forever. The first olympic in 776 BC in Olympia was an significant event
Special Olympics transforms lives through the joy of sports, every day, everywhere. They are the world’s largest sports organization for people with intellectual disabilities. It reaches more than 4.5 million athletes in 170 countries, along with millions of volunteers and supporters. Every day, Special Olympics inspires hope, confidence, and courage. Not only do they change the lives of our athletes, but also the lives of our coaches, families, volunteers and others who have the opportunity to take part. Having sport in common is just one more way that preconceptions and false ideas are swept away. Unified sports is all about social inclusion and that’s why we started the Patrick Henry UniPHied Track Team. Patrick Henry UniPHied Track Team
I don’t think Eunice Kennedy Shriver had any idea, when she first created Special Olympics, that it would grow and blossom into the profound, successful organization it is today. After witnessing how poorly individuals with intellectual disabilities were being treated, she knew something had to be done. She decided that these individuals needed a place to play and compete in sports, just like all other individuals. From this, Special Olympics was created. This organization has grown great measures since its formation and has been positively impacting individuals with special needs over the past several decades. Special Olympics works “to provide year-round sports training and athletic competition in a
The Olympic games allow athletes to showcase their ability to different countries around the world. African Americans and some of the other races were not as lucky in the 1930’s during the olympics due to discrimination starting to happen. When the Nazi rule started, everything changed for the Jewish community involving their everyday lives. The 1936 Berlin games shed light from around the world because of the Boycott Debate, Racism that happened in the games and the change in way people see different races in the world today.
There were both positive and negative results resulting from the flow of Greek refugees. At first the Greeks welcomed their compatriots. However, soon their presence put a damper on traditional Greek philoxenia (welcoming of strangers). When the refugees started arriving from Turkey with typhus, smallpox, and cholera, the Greek government put a temporary stop to their arrivals. Some of the refugees lingered in disease-ridden boats offshore. A ship arriving in Piraeus from Samsun, on the north Turkish coast, in January
One of the first things that pops into your head when you think of the Olympics is the torch. Anyone who watches the Olympics just can’t possibly ignore it. It is the most weel-known thing about the Olympics. Throughout many years the Olympic Comitee has done a good jobs keeping the torch a tradition.
The Olympics, which comes every 4 year and gives both happiness and despair at the same time to countries, is proceeded by harmony from various countries in the world. Last year in 2016, among the many countries participating in the Rio, Brazil Olympic games, there was a remarkable team which were named the ‘Refugee Olympic Athletes’. For the first time since the Olympics started in 1896, they participated in the same league as the other teams. It was organized by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to recognize the global refugee crisis. The refugee squad consisted of two Syrian refugee swimmers, two Congo refugee judo players, one Ethiopian refugee marathoner, and five South Sudanese middle-distance runner refugees. Every sportsman
The Olympic Games are a set of friendly competitions that bring countries from all around the world together, but many social, political, and economic problems in the past and present including racial and sexual discrimination and apartheid have prevented the Olympic Games from fulfilling their promise to bring countries together.