Politics in the Olympics: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
m Bot: Fixing double redirect from List of Olympic Games scandals and controversies to List of Olympic Games scandals, controversies and incidents Tag: Redirect target changed |
|||
(135 intermediate revisions by 74 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
#REDIRECT [[List of Olympic Games scandals, controversies and incidents]] {{R from merge}} |
|||
{{Unreferenced|date=August 2007}} |
|||
The Olympic Games were created by Baron [[Pierre de Coubertin]] for two reasons: |
|||
1) A way for the countries of the globe to become more connected.<br> |
|||
2) It was a reason for men to become more "vigoureux" or vigorous. (This was in answer to the Franco-Prussian War in which Germany defeated France) |
|||
However in the years to come this began to change. In 1900 the Olympics became a great honor for countries who partook. |
|||
== 1936 == |
|||
The [[1936 Summer Olympics]], held in Berlin, were the first games in which politics had a major role. They were Hitler's Olympics and he took them as a chance to show off the new Germany after WWI. Hitler also wanted to put forward his view of the Aryan race as being the best in every aspect, he viewed black people to be so far below the Aryans they could not possibly stand a chance. Unfortunately for him, US athletes like [[Jesse Owens]] proved otherwise. |
|||
== 1956 == |
|||
The [[1956 Summer Olympics]], held in Melbourne, were affected by numerous boycotts. Egypt, Iraq, and Lebanon boycotted in protest of the Israeli invasion of Egypt. The Netherlands, Spain and Switzerland boycotted in protest of the Soviet Union's invasion of Budapest, Hungary. |
|||
== 1968 == |
|||
The [[1968 Summer Olympics]] were held in Mexico City. At these games Tommie Smith and John Carlos, gold and bronze medalists, gave the black power salute during the Star Spangled Banner. This led to the two athletes being expelled from the games because there action was against the principles of the Olympic Games. See [[1968 Olympics Black Power Salute]] |
|||
Students in Mexico City tried to make use of the media attention for their country to protest against the authoritarian character of the Mexican government. The Mexican government reacted with violence, culminating in the [[Tlatelolco Massacre]] of [[October 2]] in which more than two hundred protesters were gunned down by government forces. |
|||
== 1972 == |
|||
The [[1972 Summer Olympics]] held in Munich Germany were probably the most negatively affected games. Eleven Israeli athletes were kidnapped and ultimately killed by Palestinian terrorists. The terrorists demands was the release of 234 Palestinians. |
|||
See [[Munich Massacre]] |
|||
== 1976 == |
|||
Held in Montreal, the [[1976 Summer Olympics]] were marred with more boycotts as well as drug allegations against the East Germans. The boycotts were held out by 26 African countries because New Zealand's rugby team toured South Africa. |
|||
Another political note is that Taiwan was not allowed to compete because Canada would not recognize them as the Republic of China. |
|||
== 1980 == |
|||
Moscow's [[1980 Summer Olympics]] was the year of the largest boycott in Olympic history. The boycott included the USA and 61 other countries in response to the USSR's invasion of Afghanistan. The 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York stirred controversy because of plans to convert the Olympic athletes' dormitory facilities into a state prison afterwards. This made legal history when the National Moratorium on Prison Construction won a court ruling allowing its use of the Olympic symbol on a poster as protected speech. |
|||
== 1984 == |
|||
Solely in retaliation of the 1980 boycott, the USSR, East Germany, Cuba and 14 other countries boycotted the Los Angeles [[1984 Summer Olympics]]. |
|||
This was also the first year since 1952 that China participated. |
|||
== See also == |
|||
*[[Olympic Games]] |
|||
[[Category:Olympics]] |
Latest revision as of 20:50, 12 August 2024
- From a merge: This is a redirect from a page that was merged into another page. This redirect was kept in order to preserve the edit history of this page after its content was merged into the content of the target page. Please do not remove the tag that generates this text (unless the need to recreate content on this page has been demonstrated) or delete this page.
- For redirects with substantive page histories that did not result from page merges use {{R with history}} instead.