PARIS: As fighting continues to rage around Ukraine and within Gaza so hundreds of representatives of sportsmen and women of all the 206 National Olympic Committees registered a call for peace during the Games which open formally in Paris on Friday

Wearing scarfs with the message “Give peace a chance” and holding flags with the same words, they protrayed the powerful role that sport can play to foster peace and mutual understanding.

The event included athletes from NOCs whose countries are currently in conflict or war with each other.

IOC president Thomas Bach said: “When our founder, Pierre de Coubertin, revived the Olympic Games 130 years ago – right here in Paris – he saw it as a way to promote peace among all nations and people of the world. He was a true ambassador for peace. Today, you – the Olympic athletes – you are the peace ambassadors of our time.

“You, the Olympic athletes, will show us how our world would be, if we all lived in the same Olympic spirit of peaceful co-existence. You will compete fiercely against each other. At the same time, you are living peacefully together under one roof, here in the Olympic Village. You are respecting the same rules and most importantly you are respecting each other. In this way, you are sending a resounding message of peace from Paris to the world.”

Bach invited athletes to extend their call for peace, saying: “Please share this call for peace with all your fans, your family and friends back home. In this way, our many voices will become one. This one voice will resound all around the globe. May this call inspire all the political leaders of the world to take action for peace.”

He concluded: “Together we say: Give Peace a Chance!”

At the same time, the Paris 2024 Olympic Truce Mural was inaugurated in the presence of the IOC President; the Paris 2024 Organising Committee President, Tony Estanguet; Masomah Ali Zada, Chef de Mission for the IOC Refugee Olympic Team for Paris 2024; Emma Terho, Chair of the IOC Athletes’ Commission (AC); and the entire Executive Board of the IOC. Together with the athletes representing all five continents, they signed the Olympic Truce Mural.

Estanguet said: “In this Village, there is a symbol within the symbol: it’s the Olympic Truce Mural.

“It is the place of gathering and encounters, the place of sharing and peace. It reminds us of the message as humble as it is crucial: the Games cannot change everything, but they can carry something very strong, with the strength of example. An example for peace, solidarity, progress. An example we value and need more than ever in those troubled times”.

“We are representing the stories of over 120 million forcibly displaced people across the world. This team knows only too well the importance of peace. The athletes have told me their stories. They know from their own experience what it is like to flee from your home, to have your safety taken from you and have no choice left but to flee because of the ever-increasing number of wars and violence,” Masomah Ali Zada said.

“In my experiences with the Refugee Olympic Team, I have been encouraged by what I see. The team embodies what is possible – it brings people together from different countries, languages and cultures. Yet we are here, in one team, under a unified flag, the Olympic flag, representing peace and respect. Together.”

She concluded: “So today, I am proud to be here with the President of the IOC and the President of Paris 2024 and invite all athletes of the Olympic Games to join us in this call for peace, so that we may extend our message from the Olympic Games to the world and achieve peace once and for all.”

Truce mural

The Olympic Truce Mural has been a feature of every Olympic Village since the Olympic Winter Games Turin 2006, serving as a powerful symbol of sport’s ability to promote peace, and offering a unique opportunity for athletes from around the world to show their support for the values of peace, respect, solidarity, inclusion and equality.

Each edition of the recent Olympic Games has a uniquely designed mural in the Athletes’ Village that features signatures from thousands of athletes, coaches and team officials, calling for peace and showing their support for the Olympic Truce.

The Olympic Truce Mural also serves as a visual representation of the United Nations’ (UN) Olympic Truce Resolution, which calls on all nations to cease hostilities and observe the Olympic Truce.

The resolution for the observance of the Olympic Truce for the Olympic and Paralympic Games Paris 2024 was formally adopted by the UN in November 2023, calling for it to be respected from seven days before the start of the Olympic Games until seven days after the Paralympic Games.

Entitled “Building a peaceful and better world through sport and the Olympic ideal”, the resolution calls for “support for the International Olympic Committee in its efforts to promote peace and human understanding through sport and the Olympic ideal” and acknowledges that “the Olympic and Paralympic Games Paris 2024 will be a unifying event”.

It also welcomes “the leadership of Olympic and Paralympic athletes in promoting peace and human understanding through sport and the Olympic ideal”, and calls upon all Member States “to cooperate with the International Olympic Committee and the International Paralympic Committee in their efforts to use sport as a tool to promote peace, dialogue and reconciliation in areas of conflict during and beyond the period of the Olympic and Paralympic Games”.

Ancient tradition

The tradition of the “Olympic Truce”, or “Ekecheiria”, was established in Ancient Greece to allow safe participation in the ancient Olympic Games for all athletes and spectators.

The IOC decided to revive the concept of the Olympic Truce for the Olympic Games, with a view to protecting, as far as possible, the interests of the athletes and sport in general, and to harness the power of sport to promote peace, dialogue and reconciliation more broadly.

Since 1993, the UN General Assembly has repeatedly expressed its support for the Olympic Truce ideal and for the IOC’s mission by adopting every two years – one year before each edition of the Olympic Games – a resolution entitled “Building a peaceful and better world through sport and the Olympic ideal”.

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