The Olympic aid
motto “Every child has the right to play” has taken on new dimensions at the
2008 Beijing Olympics. The athletes themselves are partnering with corporate
donors to transform their gold, silver, and bronze medals into matching
contributions for underprivileged youth in more than 20 African, Asian, and
Middle Eastern countries. The funds
will provide equipment, instruction, and counseling in motivation,
sportsmanship, and health guidance. All
this is the work of the Right to Play organization, which was founded by
Norwegian Olympic speed skating champion Johann Olav Koss. Koss says he has enlisted more than 40 current
Olympic athletes, including Ethiopian track star Haile Gebrselassie, corporate
health and medical services giant, Johnson and Johnson, and the long reach of
the internet to enhance projects already underway in Ethiopia, Uganda, Sierra
Leone, and many other countries.
“We have over 40 athletes as
part of the medals grant program, where Johnson and Johnson is matching
$20,000, $15,000, and $10,000 for every medal they are winning. And they have now more and more athletes
signing up as well. In addition, we
have given them bracelets. It’s called
the Hearts of Gold and it’s bracelets for inspiration, where the athletes get
one piece of it and there’s a copy bracelet, which they can give to the person
that’s inspired them the most to come to the games. And over half the athletes, more than five thousand athletes,
have picked up that bracelet,” he said.
First among the
prize-winning athletes to win gold was swimmer Natalie Coughlin, who raised the
first $20,000 donation for the Right to Play organization by winning the
women’s backstroke event. Koss calls
her a “fantastic athlete” who not only “won the gold. She also won two silver
and three bronze (in Beijing) so she has actually a total of $80,000 in donations
for us (Right to Play),” Koss noted.
Adding the six medals Coughlin has won in China to her 2004 total of
five medals at the Athens Olympics, Natalie Coughlin is now an 11-time Olympic
medalist.
Olympic long-distance runner
Haile Gebrselassie was an early recruit as one of Koss’ Right to Play Athletic
Ambassador. It was in Eritrea and in
Gebrselassie’s neighboring homeland of Ethiopia where Johann Koss found his
inspiration to develop his Right to Play regimen of sport and play programs to
improve health, build life skills, and foster peace for underprivileged
children living in communities affected by war, poverty, and disease.
“Haile’s always a man who
likes to stand up and say ‘I like to support Right to Play and he’s one of the
big idols. In the country itself, Haile
is such a role model for everybody looking up to him as one of the biggest
heroes of his own nation,” says Koss.
Another aspect of the Right
to Play programs in addition to the medal grants and the Olympic bracelets is a
fellowship program, a three-month internship in a foreign country. It’s also underwritten by Johnson and
Johnson. Recently, a two-time Olympian
with a commitment to using the power of sport as a lifeline for children in
Africa was named to an administrative fellowship program in Kampala, Uganda. She is Canadian badminton player Anna
Rice. Koss says that Rice will take up
her Right to Play fellowship next spring in Uganda’s capital, Kampala,
“She will go there in the
spring of next year, and she will really get into working in the area of development,
particularly in the programs we have in East Africa focused on sport and play
as an educational tool for health prevention.
And we all hear about the issues around HIV/AIDS. And the particular games she will be working
with are these games: she will be educating children, and girls in particular,
on how they can protect themselves from the disease. And that has been a very successful project. I’m excited that she will be their Olympic
Ambassador in Kampala, Uganda for three
months next year,” he said.
On Monday, Right to Play
introduced an online auction that allows internet bidders around the world to
acquire memorabilia from the Beijing Olympics that has been donated by the
athletes and sponsors of the games to raise funds for the organization’s
operations. Koss says the bids for a
basketball shirt signed by the US Olympic men’s basketball squad drew
considerable interest, as did the Olympic torch. The auction will continue online for several days in the next
week after the Olympics closes and Koss says he hopes both the Right to Play
web site and the eBay auction web site will continue to generate an
enthusiastic response. He notes that
the increased funding will allow the organization to expand the countries it
operates in from 22 to 26 with the addition of Burundi, Botswana, and Kenya, as
well as the group’s first Latin American venture, Peru.
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