Special Olympics end with a party
Members of the UAE team in celebratory mood at the Closing Ceremony of the Special Olympics Mena Games.
The cheers of athletes and their coaches echoed across Abu Dhabi on Thursday night as the Special Olympics Mena Games 2018 came to a close.
As the Special Olympics flag that had been flying over Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre was lowered, the Special Olympics Flame of Hope cauldron was extinguished.
The Games were officially declared closed, and the evening’s festivities began.
About 1,000 athletes, their families and coaches from 32 countries celebrated the end of a successful week of gruelling competition by dancing to performances from some of the region’s greatest singers.
But it is the legacy the Games leave behind that will carry on for generations to come, according to Tala Al Ramahi, chief strategic officer of the Special Olympics World Games.
“What I saw was that people came to our event with certain perceptions about the ability of our athletes but after the Games, these perceptions changed,” she said.
“One of the main aims of the Games is to change societal perceptions and just presenting this platform where people of different abilities can interact is really important.”
Ms Al Ramahi, who is also a board member for the Special Olympics UAE, described the messages she received from those who attended as heart-warming.
“We went to watch the first female Emirati gymnast compete and it was so amazing watching not only how proud her father was of her but also how happy she was. She had never competed on a global level before, her parents used gymnastics as a way to let her have fun and engage in something she enjoyed but for her to compete and seeing how excited she was, was amazing.”
Throughout the competition, the enthusiasm of the athletes never waned.
There will be no rest for organisers, who have already begun planning for the Special Olympic World Games that will be held in the capital next year.
“For the World Games we want to make sure that we increase the number of opportunities for people to interact and we are aiming to be the most inclusive Games ever held,” said Ms Al Ramahi.
Organisers aim to achieve this by ensuring that people with intellectual disabilities are included in every aspect of the Games, be it planning or volunteering.
The volunteer programme launched during the regional Games was a great success for the volunteers with intellectual disabilities and the people who interacted with them, Ms Al Ramahi said.
She said this programme will be further developed during the 2019 World Games.
Peter Wheeler, chief executive of the Special Olympics, attended the closing ceremony on Thursday and described the Games as a great success.
“The response from the community, the fans, the volunteers really bodes well for the World Games.
“We have seen the outpouring of interest and believe that the Games have increased the awareness of the community of Abu Dhabi about the Special Olympics.
“People now understand it and are excited by it. The response next year will be tenfold,” he said.
Mr Wheeler said one of the many highlights of the Games was the medical screening of 3,500 people as part of the Healthy Athletes programme, a record for any regional games.
At next year’s World Games, the opening ceremony will be held at Zayed Sports City.
“We will build more basketball courts, tennis courts, table tennis. This year we used about two thirds of Adnec but for the World Games we will use 100 per cent and expand the footprint of all the competition venues we used this time,” Mr Wheeler said.
School pupils will be encouraged to participate and meet the athletes.
More than 7,000 athletes from about 170 of the planet’s 195 countries will take part in the World Games in Abu Dhabi from March 8-22, 2019.