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May 26, 2013  |  About the Berkley Center  |  Directions to the Center  |  Subscribe
 
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This page features essays submitted as part of the Olympic Values Essay Competition.

OTHER POSTS

Chad Carson (United States) on Justice Through Sport

September 7, 2012

Soumitra Subinaya (India) on the Grammar of Conscience

September 7, 2012

Shashank Harivyasi (India) on Bridging the Gap: Humanity and Olympism

September 4, 2012

Akampurira Justus (Uganda) on Interpreting Olympic Values and Recommendations for Olympism in the Twenty-First Century

September 4, 2012

Kyomuhendo Ateenyi (Uganda) on Olympism in the Twenty-First Century: The Place of a Value That Is Timeless

August 31, 2012

Steven Schmidt (United States) on How Sport Demonstrates Our Shared Humanity

August 31, 2012

Desislava Stoyanova (Bulgaria) on the Meaning of Olympic Values in the Twenty-First Century

August 31, 2012

Adetunji Adeniran (Nigeria) on Olympic Values That Promote Peace

August 30, 2012

Kenneth Sickle (United States) on Tools and Weapons

August 30, 2012

Jimmy Shaw (China) on Olympic Values That Inspire a Harmonious Life

August 29, 2012

Londiwe Goba (South Africa) on Respect, Excellence and Friendship: The African Perspective on the Meaning of These Values and How They Can Be Applied to Bring About Social Upliftment in the Twenty-First Century

August 29, 2012

Wihan Botha (South Africa) on the Olympic Games 2012 – Where Dreams Become Reality!

August 27, 2012

Rand Kamaran Khalid (Iraq) on Bridging Cultures

August 27, 2012

Rakesh Ranjan (India) on Olympic Values for the 21st Century and Their Realization

August 27, 2012

Ariana Andrews (New Zealand) on International Cooperation Inspired by Olympic Values

August 25, 2012

Isaac Piche (United States) on Camaraderie Through Competition

August 24, 2012

Desislava Stoyanova (Bulgaria) on Interpreting Olympic Values for the Twenty-First Century

August 24, 2012


>> more

RELATED RESOURCES: VALUES

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Cecilia Maritza Tenorio Pereyra (Perú) on How Olympic Values Inspire Self-Realization and Achievement

July 4, 2012

From August 29 to September 9, the fourteenth Paralympic Games will take place in London. This is an official competition for disabled sportsmen from all over the world and, different from other years, will be held in the birthplace of the Olympic Games for people with disabilities: the United Kingdom. Historical sources indicate that it was the English neurosurgeon Ludwing Guttman in 1948 who proposed a sports competition for disabled World War Two veterans. It is from this point forward that the transformation of how we see and understand disability began, not by making differences and hoping socially accepted stereotypes disappear, but through accepting their conditions in order to develop other kind of abilities.
Sports have contributed to forming values of self-realization in people with disabilities. Values such as perseverance, resolution, self-discipline, and tenacity have not only allowed these people to overcome their personal barriers, but are also an important reference point for the Olympic Games of the 21st century. From my view, the Olympic Games’ values should express the set of principles that guide people’s behavior to their self-realization, conquering their fears and facing the challenges of life. It is therefore essential to have aspirations and motivations that drive us to establish goals. In the case of people with disabilities, we can see that the Paralympic Games represent an opportunity for people to overcome their own barriers and reach their dreams.

These Olympic values also contribute to breaking social prejudices toward disabilities in sports. Even in our time there is still a high degree of exclusion of people with disabilities in various sports. We often think that having a physical, mental, or sensorial handicap is reason enough to exclude. However, the Paralympic Games are an opportunity to prove otherwise. People with disabilities know how to withstand the social prejudice because they possess the value of overcoming, which characterizes them and contributes to the development of a more open and inclusive society.

The Olympic values of the twenty-first century must express the set of attitudes and competences that help us in our personal growth. On this occasion, people with disabilities have taught us that only through overcoming our own personal and social barriers are we able to reach our dreams, goals, and aspirations long yearned for. Thus, the Olympics Games must create conditions of respect, equality, and mutual acceptance of differences, moving toward the development and enforcement of the Olympics' twenty-first century values.