National Post

POLITICS & THE OLYMPICS

NEW PARIS EXBIHIT SHOWS HOW GAMES HAVE BEEN ‘MIRROR OF SOCIETY’

- Sylvie Corbet in Paris

More than a sporting competitio­n, the Olympics are also a powerful political stage widely used in the past by totalitari­an regimes as a propaganda tool but also by athletes as a driver of change in the fight against racial inequaliti­es.

Before this summer’s Paris Olympics, an exhibit in the French capital shows how the games have been a “mirror of society” since the beginning of the 20th century.

Historian Paul Dietschy, one of the curators, said in an interview on Wednesday that “this exhibit tries to show ... this relationsh­ip between ideology, power and the Olympic Games.”

The exhibit at the Shoah Memorial, in central Paris, features photos, documents and Olympic items as well as film archives from the past century. It opens to the public on Friday and is scheduled to last until mid-november, organizers said.

It notably highlights the 1936 Berlin Olympics, which was used by Nazi Germany for propaganda purposes; the 1968 Mexico Olympics, where Black sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos raised their fists to protest racial injustice in the U.S. and the 1972 Munich Olympics, which was the scene of a brutal attack on 11 Israeli team members who were killed by Palestinia­n militants.

Dietschy said the exhibit sought to show the historic and political significan­ce of the Olympics “through the life of big stars or champions like Alfred Nakashe, who was a Jew from Algeria competing in swimming and who was deported to Auschwitz” concentrat­ion camp during The Second World War. Nakashe competed with the French team in Berlin in 1936 and in the first postwar Summer Olympics in London in 1948 after surviving the Holocaust.

The exhibit also tells the stories of athletes who embody Olympic values like Jesse Owens, the U.S. Black athlete who won four Olympic gold medals in Berlin.

Historian Caroline Francois, one of the curators, stressed that “the 1936 Games are emblematic with Jesse Owens’ story, because he is both an immense champion who left his mark on the history of sport ... but also because of his personalit­y, his career, his close ties to German champion Luz Long.”

“Owens embodies this struggle to confront Hitler and the Nazi ideology ... But he himself was a victim of racism and segregatio­n in the United States,” she said.

The exhibit also addresses the issue of how Olympic stadiums were turned into internment camps during The Second World War. Following the Nazi invasion of France in 1940, the country was ruled by a government commonly known as Vichy France, which collaborat­ed with Nazi Germany.

The displays feature photos of the Vel d’hiv stadium outside Paris, where French police herded about 13,000 people on July 16-17, 1942 before they were deported to Auschwitz. The stadium had been used for boxing, wrestling and weightlift­ing during the 1924 Paris Olympics.

Internatio­nal politics, again, are expected to be on the agenda of the Paris Olympics this year.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee said earlier this month that Russian and Belarusian athletes won’t be allowed to take part in the traditiona­l parade at the opening ceremony in the French capital.

Russia and Belarus are barred from team sports at the Olympics because of Moscow’s war in Ukraine, and the IOC has laid out a two-step vetting procedure for individual athletes from those countries to be granted neutral status. Those athletes must first be approved by the governing body of their individual sport and then by an Ioc-appointed review panel.

Amid the Israel-hamas war, IOC President Thomas Bach recently said that Israel faces no threat to its Olympic status and added: “Since the heinous attack on the Israeli team (during the 1972 Munich Olympics), there were always special measures being taken with Israeli athletes.”

In recent times, totalitari­an and democratic powers have been competing, including through sports, Dietschy said.

“So the Olympic Games of Paris are a huge moment, because we will see if the peace values will be respected. We’ll see if sports can be also a way of spreading universal democratic values.”

 ?? PHOTOS: LAURENT CIPRIANI / AP PHOTO ?? Photos of Muhammad Ali, left, Carl Lewis, centre, and Sergei Bubka are displayed at the Paris exhibit on Wednesday.
PHOTOS: LAURENT CIPRIANI / AP PHOTO Photos of Muhammad Ali, left, Carl Lewis, centre, and Sergei Bubka are displayed at the Paris exhibit on Wednesday.
 ?? ?? A display on U.S. track athlete Jesse Owens, who won
four gold medals at the 1936 Olympic Games.
A display on U.S. track athlete Jesse Owens, who won four gold medals at the 1936 Olympic Games.

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