Olympic Oath

The Olympic Oath (distinct from the Olympic creed) is a solemn promise made by one athlete—as a representative of each of the participating Olympic competitors; and by one judge—as a representative of each officiating Olympic referee or other official, at the opening ceremonies of each Olympic Games. It was spoken in Chinese at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing and in Italian at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin.

The athlete, from the team of the organizing country, holds a corner of the Olympic Flag while reciting the oath :

In the name of all the competitors I promise that we shall take part in these Olympic Games, respecting and abiding by the rules which govern them, committing ourselves to a sport without doping and without drugs, in the true spirit of sportsmanship, for the glory of sport and the honor of our teams.[1]

The judge, also from the host nation, likewise holds a corner of the flag but takes a slightly different oath:

In the name of all the judges and officials, I promise that we shall officiate in these Olympic Games with complete impartiality, respecting and abiding by the rules which govern them in the true spirit of sportsmanship.[1]

Since the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics, an additional oath is taken by a coach from the host country:

In the name of all the coaches and other members of the athletes' entourage, I promise that we shall commit ourselves to ensuring that the spirit of sportsmanship and fair play is fully adhered to and upheld in accordance with the fundamental principles of Olympism.[2]

History

A call for an oath was announced as early as 1906 by International Olympic Committee (IOC) president and founder Pierre de Coubertin in the Revue Olympique (Olympic Review in French).[1] This was done in an effort to ensure fairness impartiality.[1]

The Olympic Oath was first taken at the 1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp by the fencer/water polo player Victor Boin. The first judge's oath was taken at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo by Fumio Asaki.

Victor Boin's oath in 1920 was

We swear. We will take part in the Olympic Games in a spirit of chivalry, for the honour of our country and for the glory of sport.[1]

In 1961, "swear" was replaced by "promise" and "the honour of our countries" by "the honour of our teams" in an obvious effort to eliminate nationalism at the Olympic Games.[1] The part concerning doping was added at the 2000 Summer Olympics.

Speakers

The athletes, judges and coaches that have delivered the Olympic Oath are listed below.[3]

Olympic Oath
OlympicsAthleteJudge (Official)CoachLanguage
1920 Summer OlympicsVictor Boin---
1924 Winter OlympicsCamille Mandrillon---
1924 Summer OlympicsGéo André--French.
1928 Winter OlympicsHans Eidenbenz---
1928 Summer OlympicsHarry Dénis---
1932 Winter OlympicsJack Shea---
1932 Summer OlympicsGeorge Calnan--English
1936 Winter OlympicsWilly Bogner, Sr.---
1936 Summer OlympicsRudolf Ismayr---
1948 Winter OlympicsBibi Torriani---
1948 Summer OlympicsDonald Finlay--English
1952 Winter OlympicsTorbjørn Falkanger---
1952 Summer OlympicsHeikki Savolainen---
1956 Winter OlympicsGiuliana Minuzzo---
1956 Summer OlympicsJohn Landy (Melbourne)
Henri Saint Cyr (Stockholm)
--English/Swedish
1960 Winter OlympicsCarol Heiss---
1960 Summer OlympicsAdolfo Consolini---
1964 Winter OlympicsPaul Aste--German
1964 Summer OlympicsTakashi Ono--Japanese
1968 Winter OlympicsLéo Lacroix--French
1968 Summer OlympicsPablo Garrido--Spanish
1972 Winter OlympicsKeiichi SuzukiFumio Asaki-Japanese
1972 Summer OlympicsHeidi SchüllerHeinz Pollay-German
1976 Winter OlympicsWerner Delle KarthWilly Köstinger-German
1976 Summer OlympicsPierre St.-JeanMaurice Fauget-French (St.-Jean)/English (Fauget)
1980 Winter OlympicsEric HeidenTerry McDermott-English
1980 Summer OlympicsNikolai AndrianovAlexander Medved-Russian
1984 Winter OlympicsBojan KrižajDragan Perovic-Serbo-Croatian
1984 Summer OlympicsEdwin MosesSharon Weber-English
1988 Winter OlympicsPierre HarveySuzanna Morrow-Francis-English
1988 Summer OlympicsHur Jae
Shon Mi-Na
Lee Hak-Rae-Korean
1992 Winter OlympicsSurya BonalyPierre Bornat-French
1992 Summer OlympicsLuis Doreste BlancoEugeni Asensio-Spanish/Catalan
1994 Winter OlympicsVegard UlvangKari Kåring-English (Ulvang)/Norwegian (Kåring)
1996 Summer OlympicsTeresa EdwardsHobie Billingsley-English
1998 Winter OlympicsKenji OgiwaraJunko Hiramatsu-Japanese
2000 Summer OlympicsRechelle HawkesPeter Kerr-English
2002 Winter OlympicsJimmy SheaAllen Church-English
2004 Summer OlympicsZoi DimoschakiLazaros Voreadis-Greek
2006 Winter OlympicsGiorgio RoccaFabio Bianchetti-Italian
2008 Summer OlympicsZhang Yining[4]Huang Liping[5]-Chinese
2010 Winter OlympicsHayley Wickenheiser[6]Michel Verrault[6]-English/French
2012 Summer OlympicsSarah Stevenson[7]Mik Basi[7]Eric Farrell[7]English
2014 Winter OlympicsRuslan ZakharovVyacheslav Vedenin [8]Anastassia PopkovaRussian

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, March 19, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.