Current:Home > ScamsUnder sea and over land, the Paris Paralympics flame is beginning an exceptional journey -Blueprint Capital School
Under sea and over land, the Paris Paralympics flame is beginning an exceptional journey
View
Date:2025-04-19 09:37:45
Two weeks after French star swimmer Léon Marchand extinguished the Olympic flame to close the Paris Olympics, the spotlight is now on its Paralympic counterpart.
The flame will be lit on Saturday in Stoke Mandeville, a village northwest of London widely considered the birthplace of the Paralympic Games. The flame will then travel to France under the English Channel for a four-day relay from Atlantic Ocean shores to Mediterranean beaches, from mountains in the Pyrenees to the Alps.
Its journey will end in Paris on Wednesday during the Paralympics opening ceremony — with the lighting of a unique Olympic cauldron attached to a hot-air balloon that will fly over the French capital every evening during 11 days of competition.
The Flame is Lit
The lighting ceremony of the Paralympic Heritage Flame on Saturday will be held in Buckinghamshire, where the Stoke Mandeville Games were first held in 1948 for a small group of wheelchair athletes who had sustained spinal injuries during World War II.
The man behind the idea was Ludwig Guttmann, a Jewish neurosurgeon who fled Nazi Germany and worked at Britain’s Stoke Mandeville hospital. At the time, suffering a spinal injury was considered a death sentence, and patients were discouraged from moving. Guttmann made the patients sit up and work muscles, and hit upon competition as way to keep them motivated.
Those later grew into the first Paralympic Games, which took place in Rome in 1960. The Heritage Flame ceremony in Stoke Mandeville was first held ahead of the London Paralympics in 2012.
Crossing the Channel
The flame will then cross the sea like its Olympic twin did when it arrived in France from Greece in May — but this time via the Channel Tunnel. That marks the start of the Paralympic relay.
A group of 24 British athletes will embark on the underwater journey through the 50-kilometer long (30-mile) tunnel. Midway through, they will hand over the flame to 24 French athletes who will bring it ashore in Calais. It will be used to light 12 torches, symbolizing 11 days of competition and the opening ceremony.
4 days, 1,000 torchbearers and 50 cities
Once on French soil, the flame’s 12 offshoots will head in different directions to kick off the Paris Olympics’ encore and aim to rekindle enthusiasm for the Games.
Among 1,000 torchbearers will be former Paralympians, young para athletes, volunteers from Paralympic federations, innovators of advanced technological support, people who dedicate their lives to others with impairments and people who work in the non-profit sector to support carers.
They will take the flame to 50 cities across the country to highlight communities that are committed to promoting inclusion in sport and building awareness of living with disabilities.
An exceptional flame will be lit in Paris on Sunday to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the French capital from Nazi Germany occupation during World War II.
Highlighting para sport infrastructure and innovation
The relay will highlight places that are committed to developing para sports, as well as places where famous Paralympians grew up, such as Lorient, home of double Paralympic sailing gold medalist Damien Seguin.
The relay will go through Châlons-en-Champagne, which has the only gymnasium in France designed to facilitate access to sport for people with intellectual disabilities. And Rouen, Chartres, and Troyes, which offer a range of disciplines, from sledge hockey to para tennis, para triathlon, adapted baseball and para climbing.
The flame will stop in Chambly, which, with its three sports facilities adapted for para sports, has served as a training camp location alongside Deauville and Antibes.
Meet the star of the Games – the cauldron
On Wednesday, the 12 flames will become one again when the relay ends in central Paris after visiting historical sites along the city’s famed boulevards and plazas before lightening the cauldron during the three-hour opening show.
The cauldron is the first in Olympic history to light up without the use of fossil fuels. It uses water and electric light and is attached to a balloon. It made a stunning first flight at the Olympics opening ceremony.
Each day of the Paralympics, the cauldron will fly more than 60 meters (197 feet) above the Tuileries gardens from sunset until 2 a.m.
____
AP Paralympics and Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/paralympic-games and https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games
veryGood! (216)
Related
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Harris-Walz camo hat is having a moment. Could it be bigger than MAGA red?
- Case that could keep RFK Jr. off New York’s presidential ballot ends
- Tropical Storm Debby pounding North Carolina; death toll rises to 7: Live updates
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- How Victor Montalvo honors Mexican roots in breaking journey to Paris Olympics
- 2024 Olympics: Ethiopia’s Lamecha Girma Taken Off Track in Stretcher After Scary Fall
- Inside an 'ambush': Standoff with conspiracy theorists left 1 Florida deputy killed, 2 injured
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Morocco topples Egypt 6-0 to win Olympic men’s soccer bronze medal
Ranking
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Flood damage outpaces some repairs in hard-hit Vermont town
- The Ultimate Guide to Microcurrent Therapy for Skin: Benefits and How It Works (We Asked an Expert)
- An estimated 1,800 students will repeat third grade under new reading law
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- 'A Good Girl's Guide to Murder' is now on Netflix: Get to know the original books
- Watch these fabulous feline stories on International Cat Day
- Family members arrested in rural Nevada over altercation that Black man says involved a racial slur
Recommendation
Could your smelly farts help science?
Handlers help raise half-sister patas monkeys born weeks apart at an upstate New York zoo
James Webb Telescope reveals mystery about the energy surrounding a black hole
US jury convicts Mozambique’s ex-finance minister Manuel Chang in ‘tuna bonds’ corruption case
'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
15-year-old Virginia high school football player dies after collapsing during practice
North Carolina man wins $1.1M on lottery before his birthday; he plans to buy wife a house
Florida sheriff’s deputy rescues missing 5-year-old autistic boy from pond