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Athens 2004 there is no place like home |
In 2004 the Olympic Games return to the
place where they were born, where they were revived and where they will be
renewed. The ATHENS 2004 Olympic Games are more than an opportunity to
participate in the greatest celebration of humanity. They are an opportunity to
be part of a story that is as old as history itself. And when it comes to making
history, there is really no place like home.
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Nothing moved Greeks more than the decision of the International
Olympic Committee (IOC) in 1998 to hold the 2004 Olympic games in
Athens. "The Games are coming home" headlined Greek newspapers,
and both government officials and private citizens are planning to
make it a memorable event. |
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The Olympic Games were established over 2,500 years ago in Olympia, southern Greece,
to honor Zeus, following a tradition created by Hercules, who competed there for the
prize of an olive branch.
Centuries later all Greek cities honored a truce every four years in order
for their best athletes to compete at Olympia.
It is estimated that the first formal Olympics were held in 776 B.C. the
year that also marks the beginning of dated history.
The Games were banned as pagan rituals in396 A.D. by; Roman emperor Theodosius. 15 centuries later, in 1896, the Olympic Games were brought back to life in
Athens -then a small, poor country of around 130,000 people - by French
sportsman, Pierre de Coubertin. |
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 The
construction of the first stadium is generally attributed to the statesmen
and orator Lycourgos, about 330 BC. However more than a thousand years ago,
the Athenians had celebrated these Panathenaic games, the founder of which
was supposed to have been the Attic hero-king Theseus. The ground belonged
to an Athenian citizen Deinias, who ceded it to the town for the
construction of an arena, as well as an amphitheatre for the Pan Athenian
games. But it was five centuries after (140 AD.) that the stadion became one
of the most magnificent monuments of Athens, thanks to the munificence of
the immensely rich Athenian sophist Herodes Atticos, who had already given
more than one proof of his noble and great liberality. This patron of
letters built the whole stadion of marble with such an abundance that the
contemporaries used to say that the quarries of Mountain Penteli became
exhausted. In the dark ages of the Frankish and Turkish domination this
magnificent monument was used as a Quarry and only few ornaments had
survived. It was difficult to believe that this natural ravine had formerly
contained so much glare, grandeur and glory! Yet, as by a stroke of a magic
wand. the world saw all this ancient splendor brought to life and the
Panathenaic Stadion assuming once more its dazzling ornament of pentelic
marble. The miracle was due to the initiative of a single man, Baron de
Coubertin, who had the excellent idea of establishing a committee in Paris
for the organization of International Olympic Games. The city's ancient stadium was reconstructed
in marble by a new Herodes Atticos, the Great patriot of Alexandria George Averoff.
He spared no expenses for rendering this vast athletic building its former
splendor and magnificence. The work lasted about four years and costed four
million francks. The 1896 Games saw 311
athletes from 13 nations competing in nine sports. It
included the Marathon race, run from the historic battlefield where the
Athenians defeated the invading Persians in 490 B.C., to the all marble
stadium of Athens, 42 kilometers away. The race was held to honor the unknown messenger who brought
news of the victory and expired from exhaustion.
The Games of 2004 will be very different. Athens - now a metropolis of 4 million
people-will host over 10,000 athletes participating in 300 events, thousands of
sports officials, 30,00ο journalists and media people, and hundreds of thousands
of sports fans.
IOC President Jacques Rogge admits that the Games may be "becoming too big for
one city to hold," pointing out that since 1948, the IOC has added 20 events to
each new Olympiad. "Ι proposed to the IOC executive board to make an
in-depth study of all the elements that could be scaled down, without affecting the
Games", he says. Rogge admitted that the Athens Olympics would not benefit
from any changes, but has high hopes for their success. "Greeks have invented the
Games and they are really part of their cultural heritage, so there is a lot of
support for them," he said. |
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The
Olympic movement wins, by having the summer Games return home to their
birthplace |
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THE
CITY OF ATHENS.
Living in Athens is not easy. "Athens has many of the problems modern cities are
struggling to resolve," says Telemahos Hytiris, Creek Deputy Minister of Media
and Information "but we are tackling our infrastructure problems with utmost
determination and perspective".
Hytiris lists the city's facilities: "We have a new international airport of high
standards, capable of handling 16 million passengers annually. We are building a new
road network of 117 km, upgrading existing road networks, creating parking
spaces, constructing two new underground railway lines, a new Tramway, a new 32-kilometer suburban railway line, linking the main underground system
with the International Airport, and a new state-of-the-art Road Traffic Control and
Management System" he says. Hytiris comments on his country largest ever
logistical operation. "Every morning from 5:30 a.m. 155,000 people must report
for duty. Around 200,000 people must be accredited and 50,000 meals
provided, with approximately 100 tones of food being consumed daily in the
Olympic Village alone. Moreover, 25 hospitals, 270 ambulances, 35 mobile
medical units and five helicopters will be available for any eventuality". |
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Gianna Angelopoulou Daskalaki, President of the 2004 Olympics Organizing
Committee, who was instrumental in bringing the Games back to Greece, is in no
doubt about the benefits: "The Olympic movement wins, by having the summer Games
return home to their birthplace; the Greek people win, because of the jobs and
public facilities created; the world wins, because it discovers what Greece has
accomplished in its modernization; and the athletes win, by participating in a
modern event where the noblest competition of sport first began." Some projects will be ready
only weeks before the official opening, but Angelopoulou -Daskalaki is convinced
that everything will be working by ' August 13, 2004. Key projects already under
way range from new housing for 17,000 athletes and officials, (to be handed over to the
Worker's Housing
Association after 2004) and the ecologically -friendly Schinias Olympic Rowing
and Canoeing Center to the fully renovated Olympic Stadium Complex. In terms of transport, the
new Athens Airport is, according to its first president Costis Vaitsos, one of the best
in Europe while the Athens Metro will provide a new streetcar line connecting the
center of Athens with its seaside suburbs.
"We will also have over 120 kilometers of new roads and about 90 kilometers of
upgraded roads by the time the Games begin" says Angelopoulou-Daskalaki.
"We will be able to move 1 million people daily by 2004." Olympic
Torch photos |
 THE
PROBLEM OF SECURITY. Despite wide approval
for Athens as Olympic host, countries including the United States have voiced
concerns about security. However, the arrest of 17 members of the Nov.17
terrorist organization, including the man widely thought to be its leader, has
gone some way to assuaging these concerns. Greek Public Order Minister Ν. Chissohoidis emphasizes that this was only the first phase
in the
neutralization of the remnants of terrorism. Angelopoulou -Daskalaki says that
security remains the number one priority for the organizers. "We have budgeted more for
security than any
host country in history The Greek government has committed $600 million in
security infrastructure. We have hired Peter Ryan who was the security chief
at the Sydney Olympics, and we are coordinating with governments and security
agencies around the world. We have security agreements with 22 countries and we are a
member of a
seven-nation security team."
Deputy Minister of Media Telemahos Hytiris agrees. "We are taking no chances. Α
complete strategic plan involving more than 50,000 people supported by the most
sophisticated equipment is already in place."
Angelopoulou -Daskalaki explains the long-term benefits of such
developments. "According to research conducted in 2001," she says, "about
65,000 permanent jobs will be created because of the Olympics. Most important,
the technical know-how and experience Greek workers will gain during the
Olympics will help strengthen Greece's economy and job market." '`
ACCOMMODATION.
Greece is building a town to house the 17,000 athletes and sports officials,
while a 200,000 square meter €400 million
Press Village will be situated at Maroussi, closer to the Olympic Stadium.
Spectators will use rooms in hotels and private homes. Athens' hotels. including
the old Grande Britannia Hotel, used as the IOC headquarters during the 1896
Olympics, are being refurbished thanks to €300
million financing by the Greek, government. They will be ready by 2004, says loannis
Patelis, President of the Greek Tourist Organization (Ε.Ο.Τ.)
Grecohotel, a chain of 24 hotels with six in Athens and the surrounding area, has
placed its hotels at the disposal of the Olympics. "We have 2000 beds in the
Athens area hotels. The Organizing Committee will decide whether we will host
athletes, IOC officials or VIPs," says Maria Daskalantonaki, CEO of Grecotel.
Alexander Ρ. Panagopulos, president of Super fast Ferries and vice chairman of
Attica Enterprises, one of the largest passenger operations in Greece, also
runs two major ferry operations in the North Sea and the Baltic Sea and has a
combined fleet of 24 ships. He claims that ships could ferry sports fans From
nearby islands, or even be used as floating hotels. Coastal Passenger Shipping
operations are currently regulated by the government but this is due to come to
an end in 2004 "Attica Enterprises is gearing up for the deregulation of the
Greek domestic market by introducing new modern tonnage able to carry passengers
and vehicles of all types throughout the year irrespective of weather conditions,"
he says. Panagopulos also expects the deregulation of domestic lines to bring shipping
companies and tourist enterprises together. "Some of the almost uninhabited
islands of Greece can be turned into tourist centers if shipping companies work
together with developers." he adds. "We can become the tourist
destination of
our continent."
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Greeks have invented the Games and they are
part of their Cultural Heritage, so there is a lot of support for them. |
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CULTURAL
OLYMPIAD.
"The Games in Greece are connected with the genuineness of the
landscape, the genuineness of the Olympic ideals," says Greek Culture
Minister Evangelos Venizelos." The lighting and the route of
the Olympic Flame in 2004 has entirely new importance. The opportunity for
visitors to find themselves under the Greek sky under the sky of Attica and to go
to Marathon, to the Panathenian Stadium, to ancient Olympia, to Delphi, is
certainly a unique opportunity," is Venizelos. This cultural dimension is
not limited to the artistic events will be held during the period of the Games.
It has a more constructive and systematic shape thanks to the Cultural
Olympiad 2001 -2004. The Cultural Olympiad is a package of events and
programs in Greece and in all continents, following an agreement with the
International Olympic Committee. |
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It
involves art exhibitions, musical events, conferences, theater shows and operas
and is sending its message, which is search for a civilization of
civilizations internationally, explains Venizelos.
He believes that the international Olympic movement needs "a moral upgrading,
a renovation and a restoration of Olympic ideals." He adds, "The return of the
Olympic Games
to their birthplace gives us a unique opportunity to baptize once more both the
Games and the Olympic ideals and to send them back to mankind renewed, with a reliable face and with
an unquestionable moral foundation." As part of the Cultural. Olympiad, the
Festival of Athens and Musical July have been invigorated as the Greek Festival under the leadership of Creek classical composer Pericles Koukos. "Through
the Greek Festival, we prove that Greece is not only the sea, the marbles of the
monuments and the landscape, but also a culturally rich country," says Koukos.
Koukos has welcomed the New York City Ballet and the Russian Kirov Ballet, held
an Opera Cala with Jose Cura, the Εuropean Union Youth Orchestra and Vladimir
Ashkenazy, and seen Peter Ηal1 direct the UK's Royal National Theatre. He sees
this as only the beginning. |
ATHENS 2004 Olympic
Torch Relay
Song
The first global Torch Relay in the history
of the Olympic Games with the motto “Pass the Flame,
Unite the World”, now has its very own song. The
CD single with the song, which is called ‘Pass
the Flame’, is a joint product of EMI Music
International, the International Olympic Committee, and
ATHENS 2004. It went out on the market on 29 March, a
couple of days after the Lighting Ceremony of the Flame
at Olympia. Pass the Flame is the work
of top composer and producer Trevor Horn, in
collaboration with Lol Crome. Lina Nicolacopoulou wrote
the Greek lyrics, and Yiannis Kotsiras is the singer
for Greek and English languages.
To listen to a section of the song ‘Pass the Flame’, please click here
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PASS THE FLAME
Pass the Flame
Unite the World
It' s time to celebrate let our voices be heard
Pass the Flame
Unite the world
Bring us all together
We can grow a forest
On a dried up river bed
We can build a mountain
From a grain sand
Reach out, hold out your hands(x2)
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Trevor Horn, Lol Creme, Yiannis Kotsiras
Greek lyrics: Lina Nicolacopoulou |
Pass the Flame
Unite the World
It's time to celebrate let our voices be heard
Pass the Flame
Unite the world
Bring us all together
Pass the Flame
Unite the World (x5)
Reach out, hold out your hands(x2)
Pass the Flame
Unite the world
Pass the Flame
Unite the World (x5)
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Olympic
Torch
 The emblem of the ATHENS 2004
Olympic Games is a circular wreath made of a branch from an olive tree. The
Olive tree is one of the most powerful symbols of Greece. It has been a
sacred tree for Mediterranean nations for thousands of years, as well as the
ancient symbol of the Athenian City State. It has left an indelible mark in
Greece’s mythology and art. The olive branch is also a global symbol of
peace and freedom.
What
other symbol better captures the ideals of Olympics and the long
relationship between the Olympic Games and Greece?
An olive leaf served as the inspiration for the first
Olympic torch that will travel to all five continents, carrying the message
of peace for the Olympic Games of 2004. The ATHENS 2004 Olympic torch is designed to resemble an
olive leaf. Its form was drawn from the leaf’s lines and its harmonious
shape. Weighing 700 gr. and standing at 68 cm, the Torch’s design was
selected to enhance the Flame, the major emblem of the Games.
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Its ergonomic design, dominated by curves, establishes the Torch as the
continuation of the Flame itself in its free movement. The Flame rises from
the Torch as the extension of the Torchbearer’s hand. The two-toned sides
and gentle stroke of the olive leaf inspired the design. It is made of metal
and wood (olive tree) in their natural colors. The designer used the
philosophy of “Pan Metron Ariston” (all things in moderation) to give the
Torch its structure and beautiful simplicity |
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The values of the ATHENS
2004 Olympic Games- Heritage, Human Scale and Participation- are
expressed through this design in the most unique and Greek way. And for the first time in Olympic history the Torch will
carry the Olympic flame, along with the values of the 2004 Games, to all
five continents. And then, on August 13th 2004, in the Opening Ceremony of
the Olympic Games in Greece, it will light up the Athens Olympic Stadium and
the entire world. |
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