Paris 2024 Games flame lit in ancient Olympia
The sacred flame for the Paris
2024 Olympics was lit Tuesday in Olympia, Greece, the birthplace of the ancient
Games, in a ceremony inspired by antiquity and marked by messages of hope amid
multiple global crises.
"In ancient times, the
Olympic Games brought together the Greek city states, even – and in particular
– during times of war and conflict," said International Olympic Committee
President Thomas Bach.
"Today, the Olympic Games
are the only event that brings the entire world together in peaceful
competition. Then as now, the Olympic athletes are sending this powerful
message: yes, it is possible to compete fiercely against each other and at the
same time live peacefully together under one roof," he said.
Owing to cloudy weather, Greek
actresses in the role of ancient priestesses used a flame lit in a rehearsal
Monday in the 2,600-year-old Temple of Hera, near the stadium where the
Olympics were born in 776 BC.
Carrying the flame in a pot,
Greek actress Mary Mina lit the torch for the first bearer, 2020 Olympic rowing
champion Stefanos Ntouskos.
Retired French swimmer Laure
Manaudou, who won her first gold medal at the 2004 Athens Olympics, followed as
France's first torchbearer in Olympia.
'Inclusive'
Games
Officials on Tuesday stressed
that the Paris Games will set new milestones, following the legacy of the other
two prior Olympics held in the French capital.
"The Olympic Flame will
shine over the first Olympic Games inspired by our Olympic Agenda reforms from
start to finish," Bach said.
"These Olympic Games will be
younger, more inclusive, more urban, more sustainable. These will be the very
first Olympic Games with full gender parity, because the IOC allocated exactly
50 percent of the places to female and male athletes," he said.
Paris Olympics chief organiser
Tony Estanguet noted that women took part for the first time in the Paris 1900
Games, while the first Olympic Village was created for the Paris 2024 Games.
For the first time since the
Covid-19 pandemic imposed toned-down events for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and
2022 Beijing Winter Games, the ceremony was back with full regalia and scores
of spectators.
Greek President Katerina
Sakellaropoulou, French sports minister Amelie Oudea-Castera and Paris Mayor
Anne Hidalgo were present at the ceremony.
American mezzo soprano Joyce DiDonato delivered 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.
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.
Security
concerns
The Olympic flame will be handed
over to Paris 2024 organisers in a ceremony at the all-marble Panathenaic
Stadium, site of the first modern Olympic Games of 1896, on April 26.
Nana Mouskouri, the 89-year-old
Greek singer with a worldwide following, has been invited to perform at the
ceremony.
On April 27, the flame will begin
its journey to France on board the 19th-century three-masted barque Belem,
which was launched just weeks after the Athens 1896 Games.
A French historical monument, the
Belem carried out trade journeys to Brazil, Guyana and the Caribbean for nearly
two decades.
France's last surviving
three-mast steel-hulled boat, it is expected to arrive in Marseille on May 8.
Ten thousand torchbearers will
then carry the flame across 64 French territories.
It will travel through 400 towns
and dozens of tourist attractions during its 12,000-kilometre (7,500-mile)
journey through mainland France and overseas French territories in the Caribbean,
Indian Ocean and Pacific.
On July 26 it will form the
centrepiece of the Paris Olympics opening ceremony.
The ceremony is planned to be
held on the river Seine -- the first time it has not been held in the Games'
main stadium.
However, French President
Emmanuel Macron on Monday said it could be moved to the national stadium in the
event of a security threat.
Macron said instead of teams
sailing down the Seine on barges, the ceremony could be "limited to the
Trocadero" building across the river from the Eiffel Tower or "even
moved to the Stade de France".
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