Chicago Sun-Times

Rain can’t stop lighting of Special Olympics monument

Rain fails to dampen spirits during lighting of new Special Olympics monument

- JANE RECKER REPORTS,

As razor-like rain blanketed Soldier Field, leaving a wet sheen on the turf, a light emerged from one of the stadium’s tunnels: the Special Olympics flame.

Transporte­d across the country by plane and proudly run into the stadium by law enforcemen­t officers and Special Olympians, the torch continued to blaze in spite of the rain, reaching its final destinatio­n Friday at the new Special Olympics monument.

After all, a few bursts of a torrential downpour are hardly a match for the eternal flame of hope.

The monument — sculpted by Chicago artist Richard Hunt — was commission­ed as part of the Special Olympics 50th anniversar­y celebratio­n in Chicago this weekend. Located just outside Soldier Field — where the first Special Olympic Games were held in 1968 — the monument commemorat­es that anniversar­y and the work the Special Olympics organizati­on has done around the world to empower those with intellectu­al disabiliti­es.

The street the monument is on — formerly known as McFetridge Drive — will now be named Special Olympics Boulevard, Mayor Rahm Emanuel and Timothy Shriver announced.

Gov. Bruce Rauner gave a brief speech encouragin­g individual­s to ensure the “American Dream is a reality for all.” Some who’d been at the first Special Olympics also attended Friday’s festivitie­s, including some athletes and many of the organizati­on’s founders.

Illinois Supreme Court Justice Anne Burke was a physical education teacher with the Chicago Park District in 1968 when she came up with the idea of an Olympic-style event for individual­s with special needs. With the help of the Chicago Park District, Eunice Kennedy Shriver and the Kennedy Foundation, that dream came true.

Burke spoke before the lighting ceremony and received a standing ovation. Burke said it “meant everything” to have a permanent monument for the Special Olympics and that she “finally felt satisfied.”

“The world is involved, (and) now we have a definite place in history for Special Olympians and inclusion,” Burke said.

Burke had expected the Special Olympics to be a one-time event, but the organizati­on now spans six continents and provides training and competitio­ns for over 5 million athletes.

Perhaps in a moment of divine interventi­on, the clouds parted and the sun shone through just as Special Olympics representa­tives from across the globe made their way toward the monument. Kester Edwards, a global messenger from Trinidad, spoke about how much Special Olympics had changed his life as an athlete, and how honored he’s been to work for the organizati­on. He asked the crowd to continue to work toward further inclusion for those with special needs and not be satisfied with the status quo.

“What will you do for Special Olympics after we leave today?” he asked.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel got in only few words before he had to leave the stage abruptly as the rain resumed.

But even the rain couldn’t stop the Special Olympians. With a lot of dedication — and a little propane — the eternal flame in the memorial was lit amid pomp and circumstan­ce, and will forever burn outside the site of those first inclusive games.

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 ??  ?? Steve Stelter carries the Special Olympics torch at Soldier Field on Friday before the lighting of the Eternal Flame of Hope.
Steve Stelter carries the Special Olympics torch at Soldier Field on Friday before the lighting of the Eternal Flame of Hope.
 ??  ?? Illinois Supreme Court Justice Anne Burke speaks at the ceremony.
Illinois Supreme Court Justice Anne Burke speaks at the ceremony.
 ??  ?? The Eternal Flame of Hope is lit for the first time on Friday.
The Eternal Flame of Hope is lit for the first time on Friday.

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