London can be rightly proud of the Opening Ceremony of The XIV
Paralympiad. How far we have come since 1968 when Mexico City refused to host the Paralympics, now the bidder cities must bid for the Olympics and Paralympics together. The London 2012 Paralympic Games kicked off with an opening
ceremony that starred Professor Stephen Hawking, veteran actor Sir Ian McKellen
and a double amputee war veteran who rode a zip wire into the Olympic Stadium. The
show was watched in the stadium by some 80,000 spectators and members of the
Royal Family, including the Queen. A sphere ignited the "big bang" -
something which Prof Hawking, a world-renowned physicist who has motor neurone
disease, has written about extensively - to start the show and fireworks lit up
the stadium.
| The Paralympic flame going through Stoke Mandeville village |
The 2012 Paralympic Opening Ceremony looked good from here
in Stoke Mandeville. What a wonderful paean to the human spirit and the vision
of Sir Ludwig Guttmann. I loved the intertwining of Stephen Hawking and Isaac
Newton, both Lucasian Professors of Mathematics at Cambridge 300 years apart.
The performance of “Spasticus Autisticus”, an edgy song by
Britain’s most famous Raspberry and polio victim, Ian Dury, was special and
emotional. 'Hello to you out there in Normal Land,' the lyric went, 'you may
not comprehend my tale or understand.' Normal Land watched on. Not with
distaste. Or disdain. Those kinds of emotions began to seep away a long time
ago. Not even with indifference. No, Normal Land gazed at the Opening Ceremony
for the London Paralympics with admiration, even a little envy.
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| The first games - Stoke Mandeville 1948 |
The Paralympic torch began its journey here in Stoke
Mandeville, Buckinghamshire, the spiritual home of the Paralympic Games, on
Tuesday night. It was carried by 580 torchbearers in total, and after being
carried past some of London's most famous landmarks, was used to light a
scaled-down version of the Olympic cauldron.
The Paralympics has never had an opening like this and it is
a credit to London that it is set to repeat the success of the London Olympics which
have been widely praised for their organisation and the quality of the
spectator and athlete experiences.
The real legacy of these Paralympics will be to change the attitude to disability and disabled people which is still in practice appalling, particularly at a time when much of the support structure in the UK is being undermined with withdrawal of benefits, closure of Remploy factories and crude, inept and insensitive assessments outsourced to French computer company ATOS. Warm motherhood statements by “soundbite” grabbing politicians at Opening Ceremonies will not be enough to create a real legacy, ask any disabled person about the reality of their lives and attitudes in GB 2012.
In the countdown to the Opening, the crowd was shown a video
of some people who had battled their disabilities, including Margaret Maughan.
Now 84, she won Britain’s first Paralympics gold medal in 1960 in archery after
being treated at Stoke Mandeville hospital - the birthplace of the Paralympics
- by Ludwig Guttmann, the inspirational doctor whose brainchild they were and
where the Games began in 1948. There were cheers as each of the 166 participating
countries paraded into the stadium. In total more than 4,200 athletes will
compete for 503 gold medals over the next 11 days - the greatest celebration of
Paralympic sport the world has seen. Later Margaret Maughan was to light the Paralympic Cauldron in the Olympic Stadium.
The real legacy of these Paralympics will be to change the attitude to disability and disabled people which is still in practice appalling, particularly at a time when much of the support structure in the UK is being undermined with withdrawal of benefits, closure of Remploy factories and crude, inept and insensitive assessments outsourced to French computer company ATOS. Warm motherhood statements by “soundbite” grabbing politicians at Opening Ceremonies will not be enough to create a real legacy, ask any disabled person about the reality of their lives and attitudes in GB 2012.
They can take inspiration from “Poppa” Guttmann’s own
struggle to create a better future for those in his care in the wooden hut
which was Ward X at Stoke Mandeville Hospital. He had to overcome the widely held belief,
both within the medical profession and among the public, that patients, once
they had been paralysed, faced a pointless future and could never be
reintegrated into society. And because of that his colleagues in the medical
profession were baffled by Guttmann’s zeal for his new Stoke Mandeville job.
“They could not understand how I could leave Oxford University
to be engulfed in the hopeless and depressing task of looking after traumatic
spinal paraplegics,” he said.
(‘Spirit of Stoke Mandeville’ by Susan Goodman,
Collins, 1986).
Guttmann fundamentally disagreed with the commonly held
medical view on a paraplegic patient's future and felt it essential to restore
hope and self-belief in his patients as well practical re-training so when they
were well enough to leave they could once more contribute to society.
There was no sentimentality about Guttmann who believed
disabled people must not be left to wither and die but must be transformed to
have a viable and fulfilling life, a concept echoed in Prospero’s words which
Ian McKellen spoke last night;
"O wonder! / How
many goodly creatures are there here! / How beauteous mankind is! O brave new
world, / That has such people in't!
Poppa Guttmann’s reward, before his death in 1980, was to see the start of the transformation of his modest concept into the Paralympics, and thereby a transformation in the public perception not just of disabled athletes but of disability in general.
For the history of the Paralympics & Stoke Mandeville
see;
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| Marc Quinn’s sculpture of artist Alison Lapper — imperious, naked, pregnant, congenitally armless and with truncated legs |








I think that the Paralympics are great. I find myself glued to Channel 4 to watch them! Right now, i am very proud of London!
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