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How do you evaluate the new Olympic motto "Faster, Higher, Stronger - More United"?
Expand 1 All "Higher, faster, stronger" is the "motto" of the Olympic movement
"Unity, friendship, and mutual assistance" should be "mutual understanding, friendship, solidarity and "Fair competition" is the "spirit" of the Olympic Games
Xiangjian "Olympic Games"/view/1251.htm#20
The Spirit of the Olympic Games
"Olympic Games" The Charter points out that the Olympic spirit is the spirit of mutual understanding, friendship, unity and fair competition. The Olympic spirit plays a very important guiding role in the Olympic movement.
First of all, the Olympic spirit emphasizes tolerance and understanding of cultural differences.
Secondly, the Olympic spirit emphasizes fairness and justice in competitive sports.
Olympic mottos and famous sayings
The motto "Faster, Higher, Stronger" was proposed by Henri Martin Didon, who was a good friend of Coubertin. In 1891 he founded a sports school in Paris. In 1895, he adopted the above motto as the school's motto. Coubertin appreciated this very much and was praised by the members of the International Olympic Committee at that time. Later, after Coubertin's proposal and the official approval of the International Olympic Committee in 1913, the above motto was officially written into the "Olympic Charter". In 1920, at the 6th International Olympic Congress, the decision was adopted to include "Faster, Higher, Stronger" as part of the emblem of the International Olympic Committee, and this motto officially became part of the Olympic logo. The connotation of "faster, higher and stronger" is very rich. It fully expresses the Olympic movement’s spirit of continuous progress and never-satisfied struggle, and its spirit of not being afraid of hardships and daring to reach new heights. In the competition field, facing strong opponents, we should carry forward the fearless spirit of going forward, dare to fight and win. Never be satisfied with yourself, constantly defeat yourself, surpass yourself, achieve new goals, and reach new realms. We must dare to conquer nature, overcome the various restrictions that nature brings to human beings, break away from the constraints of nature on us, and gain greater freedom. While Coubertin himself admired "faster, higher, stronger", he also strongly advocated "unity, peace and progress" as the most fundamental goals pursued by the Olympic movement. "Unity, friendship, peace and progress" is now not only the purpose of the Olympic Movement and world sports, but also the common goal that all mankind needs, yearns for and pursues.
"Participation is more important than winning." This is what Coubertin quoted when he delivered an important speech at a banquet hosted by the British government during the 4th Olympic Games in London on July 24, 1908. A passage from the Bishop of Pennsylvania at the athlete awarding ceremony organized by St. Paul: "For the Olympic Games, participation is more important than winning." Coubertin quoted this sentence and gave a brilliant explanation: "The important thing in life is not The essence of victory is not to win but to make human beings braver, stronger, more cautious and more generous. This is the guiding ideology of our International Olympic Committee.
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