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Special Olympics offers training and competition opportunities in 30 Olympic-type sports for athletes 8 years or older.  For children with intellectual disabilities ages 2 through 7, Special Olympics provides a Young Athletes Program. Special Olympics coaches have a unique opportunity to work with athletes in competitive situations to assist in their training for life. As a grass-roots organization, Special Olympics relies on volunteers at all levels of the movement to ensure that every athlete is offered a quality sports training and competition experience. Individual donors, corporate partners and many others make it possible for Special Olympics to offer children and adults with intellectual disabilities the opportunity to develop physical fitness, demonstrate courage and experience joy through participation in the program.
English > About Us > Leaders > White House Remarks - EKS
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Remarks made by Eunice Kennedy Shriver at the White House Celebration Honoring her 85th Birthday and the Success of the Special Olympics Campaign for Growth Initiative
July 10, 2006

President Bush
Mrs. Bush
Members of Congress
Stephen and Jean Case
Peter and Carolyn Lynch
Athletes of Special Olympics
Distinguished Guests

Thank you President Bush.
I'm sure I will not be able to express how honored I am to be here with you on my birthday.  But I am not telling which birthday it is!

President Bush:  thank you for your wonderful remarks.  I could have no greater honor than to be welcomed to this amazing house and to be able to thank you for your years of dedication to Special Olympics—you have run with our athletes, toasted our athletes, and signed the Special Olympics Sport and Empowerment Act to support our athletes.  All of us are grateful for your help and beyond our work, we are also grateful for your compassionate response to the AIDS crisis in Africa.  And in addition to all that, you have also managed to control Teddy, at least some of the time.  PLEASE, please:  tell me how you do it!

And Mrs. Bush, children who are reading all over this country know you as their special champion.  May they enjoy a lifetime filled with libraries, knowledge, and imagination and thank you for it.  We are so honored by your gracious welcome here tonight.

Yet no matter how honored I am to be here with all of you, perhaps there is a greater honor still.  Many years ago, the prophet Isaiah wrote,

If you do away with the yoke of oppression

If you spend yourselves on behalf of the hungry

And satisfy the needs of the oppressed

Then your light will shine in darkness

And your night will become like the

Noonday.

Tonight, I thank each of you for I believe that the noonday light of justice is shining around the world because of your enormous generosity.  For in your dedication to our campaign and to over 2.2 million athletes of Special Olympics, you have each sought the light of the prophet.

When the athletes asked us for better health, together we answered YES, and over 340,000 athletes saw a doctor at Special Olympics!
When non disabled young people asked us for the chance to learn more about our athletes, together we answered YES, and over 1 million young people welcomed Special Olympics into their schools.
When families asked us for more hope, together we answered YES, and over 30,000 family leaders created networks of caring.

And most importantly, when athletes asked for a chance to play, together we answered YES to the skill, the courage, the sharing, the joy of 2,250,000 athletes in 168 countries around the world.  And they have triumphed in the noonday joy of sports—Champion athletes! Champion citizens! Champion human beings!

Mr. President, the honor we celebrate here is the honor of being part of a movement that is working one village by one village; one person by one person, one attitude by one attitude to change the world. Special Olympics athlete leaders and Best Buddies leaders and all the family leaders remind us that it is not just about "them" but about each of "us" as we journey toward being the best we can be.

Tonight as we celebrate, we know beyond us lies a dangerous world.  And sadly, throughout my lifetime, it has been so.  World Wars, regional wars, ethnic wars, religious wars.  O that they would cease!  O that we could do better than war!

But one thing has changed in my lifetime.  When I was young, my sister Rosemary was told "NO."  And I remember so well as my mother sought help.  Over and over again, she heard "No”— no place here, no program here, no welcome for your daughter here.

Tonight, Rosemary is in heaven, and I miss her.  But despite the struggles of her life, for 86 years, she was patient and kind; she never put on airs; she never judged, she always forgave; she loved to look pretty, she savored chocolate and she made everyone happy.  She taught us all that adversity meant almost nothing—that it could always be fun to be together no matter what. And I know she is joining me from heaven in thanking all of you tonight.

When we wake tomorrow, let us not forget that we have miles to go to overturn the prejudice and oppression facing the world's 180 million citizens with intellectual disabilities. But what joy for together we have begun.

May you each continue to spend your lives in this noble battle.
May you overcome ignorance.
May you challenge indifference at every turn. 
And may you find great joy in the noonday light of the great athletes of Special Olympics!

Thank you and God bless you all.

 
 

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