Gulf Today

Paris Games flame to be lit in ancient Olympia

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OLYMPIA: The sacred flame for the Paris 2024 Olympics is to be lit Tuesday in ancient Olympia, birthplace of the ancient Games, for an epic torch relay stretching from the Acropolis to the South Pacific.

Hundreds of dignitarie­s and spectators are expected to atend the ritual in the small Peloponnes­e town in southweste­rn Greece where the Olympics were born in 776 BCE, and where the ceremony is held every two years for the summer and winter Olympics.

For the first time since the Covid-19 pandemic imposed toned-down events for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and 2022 Beijing Winter Games, spectators will be able to atend the torch relay events.

At a rehearsal Monday, Greek actress Mary Mina brought the Olympic flame into life with the help of a parabolic polished mirror before handing it to the first torch bearer, 2020 Olympic rowing champion Stefanos Ntouskos.

It will be used as a backup in case overcast skies forecast for Tuesday prevent the mirror from producing flame.

The ceremony will be conducted at the ruins of the 2,600-year-old Temple of Hera, with Greek President Katerina Sakellarop­oulou and Internatio­nal Olympic Commitee president Thomas Bach heading the list of dignitarie­s.

French sports minister Amelie Oudea-castera and Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo will also be present.

“We hear nature, the rustling of the leaves, there is a sacred silence,” Artemis Ignatiou, the choreograp­her and artistic director of the Olympic flame ceremony, told state TV ERT about the ceremony’s dance performanc­e.

“There are moments when we feel as if we are hovering above the ground. It’s like travelling back in time,” she said.

American mezzo soprano Joyce Didonato is to deliver the Olympic anthem.

The torch harks back to the ancient Olympics when a sacred flame burned throughout the Games. The tradition was revived in 1936 for the Berlin Games.

Retired French swimmer Laure Manaudou, who won a gold medal in the 2004 Athens Olympics, is strongly tipped to be France’s first torchbeare­r in Olympia, according to sources in Greece.

During the 11-day relay on Greek soil, some 600 torchbeare­rs will carry the flame over a distance of 5,000 kilometres (3,100 miles) through 41 municipali­ties.

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