Kuwait Times

Special Olympics aim to smash down barriers

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LONDON: Special Olympics chairman Timothy Shriver whose organisati­on celebrates 50 years in 2018 — dreams of a world in which nobody stands in the way of people with intellectu­al disabiliti­es who want to take part in sport.

Shriver, whose mother Eunice Kennedy Shriver founded the Special Olympics, oversees a body that has around five million athletes with intellectu­al disabiliti­es and holds 100,000 events around the world annually. Events to mark this year’s anniversar­y include a “Global Day of Inclusion” at Soldier Field, Chicago, which hosted the first Internatio­nal Special Olympics Summer Games in July 1968. Timothy Shriver, nephew of assassinat­ed US president John F Kennedy, says he hopes ordinary people will help turn the tide of prejudice and enable their goal to be achieved. “I think you can roll back prejudice significan­tly but not completely,” he told AFP in a phone interview from his office in Washington DC.

“The goal is to have unified sports in every school and club round the world. Not most, not some, not a good number, but all. I would say sports clubs at the moment, there are probably perhaps four percent who do. “There is a long way to go but we live in an era when change can happen quickly and we think in our 50th anniversar­y it can happen.”

Shriver, a teacher by profession, who became chairman of the Special Olympics in 1996, says when ordinary people speak up the issue will gain momentum. “When the average person says that and the health centre opens up and doctors treat them (people with intellectu­al disabiliti­es) and schools are open as well as communitie­s to them and a job is within reach, once we get to that tipping point of the community then we have a chance. And that is what we are looking for.”

‘UNFAIR AND DEHUMANISI­NG’

Shriver’s organisati­on holds World Games every two years, alternatin­g between summer and winter events, with the next competitio­n in Abu Dhabi in 2019. The Special Olympics offer more than 30 Olympic-style individual and team sports from alpine skiing to volleyball.

Shriver describes the amount of prejudice that still exists as “astonishin­g”. “There are doctors who refuse to treat people with intellectu­al disabiliti­es, healthcare institutio­ns that say to mothers ‘your child is hopeless’, schools who don’t have programmes and companies who say we won’t hire people like you,” he said. “It is infuriatin­g, frustratin­g, unfair and dehumanisi­ng and this is why we exist, to oppose it and overcome it and end it. Until discrimina­tion is ended we will not cease. That is the bottom line.”

‘GOOD WILL WIN’

Shriver, whose father Sargent is known as the architect of the “War on Poverty” in the 1960s and in 1972 was running mate to defeated Democrat presidenti­al candidate George McGovern, is now pushing to reach the estimated 500,000 refugees with intellectu­al disabiliti­es. Special Olympics Europe Eurasia held a forum, “On the Margins”, in Amsterdam this week to draw attention to the issues facing refugees with intellectu­al disabiliti­es attended by various UN bodies.

“When I had the chance to meet with Pope Francis I told him we stand for anyone who has been excluded, is on the periphery, anyone society has said does not belong here,” said Shriver.

“Our athletes say ‘come and play with us’. It is our DNA, we are not experts on refugees, or indeed a lot of problemati­c issues like gender and race but we are experts on the idea of including people and no one is better at that than our athletes.”

Shriver was a co-producer on the Steven Spielberg film “Amistad” about an revolt by African slaves on board a Spanish-owned slave ship and he believes there is a comparison between their leader, (Joseph) Cinque, and his athletes. “The hero is not the people who helped but the unjustly incarcerat­ed slave,” said Shriver. “He leads the rebellion, he leads and inspires the lawyers and challenges the constituti­on and wins his freedom.— AFP

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 ??  ?? NEWARK: File photo taken on June 15, 2014 shows Tim Shriver, Chairman of The Board of Directors, Special Olympics attends the 2014 Special Olympics USA Games Opening Ceremony at Prudential Center on June 15, 2014 in Newark, New Jersey. — AFP
NEWARK: File photo taken on June 15, 2014 shows Tim Shriver, Chairman of The Board of Directors, Special Olympics attends the 2014 Special Olympics USA Games Opening Ceremony at Prudential Center on June 15, 2014 in Newark, New Jersey. — AFP

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