
PRESENTATION OF
THE PIERRE DE COUBERTIN
INTERNATIONAL
FAIR PLAY AWARD
TO H.E. MISTER NELSON MANDELA
PRESIDENT OF THE
OF
by Dr Norbert MÜLLER
(representing the Board of the CIFP)
The International Committee for Fair
Play presents every year its highest distinction – the Pierre de Coubertin Fair
Play Award – to an outstanding athlete or personality who by his or her
exceptional behaviour serves an example to the world.
We are convinced that fair play is
one of the fundamental questions that will affect not only the future of sport,
but also future relations between cultures and mankind in general.
Fair play is increasingly recognized
and understood as the only acceptable ethical norm that brings together
athletes of all continents and all races.
But fair play supposes a fundamental
moral attitude. In order to really promote the realization of fair play general
appeals are insufficient – these must be followed by actions.
On behalf of the International
Committee for Fair Play I have the honour of presenting today the highest
international distinction for fair play to a man who according to our criteria
has set a truly extraordinary and extremely impressive example of the spirit of
fair play for the youth of all countries -
to you,
esteemed President Nelson MANDELA .
You have throughout your life, and
in the most convincing manner, embodied the spiritual foundations of the ideal of
fair play. Through your personal convictions and your unfailing dedication you
have given the world and especially its youth a rare example of this ideal, an
example that we can only hope will be emulated.
You explain in your book "Long
Walk to Freedom" how much your own experiences as an athlete served as a
decisive help and guide. It is very important, Mister President, that you
should have expressed this so clearly.
On the one hand, the lack of
individual participation in sports today is a source of decay in modern
societies. Much more profound still is the loss of personal experience so
important for the maturation of the personality, and which so many young people
nowadays are unable to attain. Fair play cannot develop as a personal quality
without this kind of direct involvement.
Pierre de Coubertin, the founder of
the modern Olympic Movement, rightly emphasized on many occasions participation
in sports is the foundation of man's moral strength, and this, Mister
President, you have experienced in your own long life.
Another great statesman and Nobel
laureate for Peace, the American President Theodore Roosevelt, also recorded in
writing ninety years before you a similar personal experience. He and Coubertin
joined together in a lifelong friendship.
You were in your youth, esteemed
President Nelson Mandela, a successful boxer, you also
played football and competed in crosscountry races.
You steeled your body and soul through those precious lessons for a hard,
lifelong battle and you managed to overcome many hardships through fair play,which is why we honour you
today.
You have personally suffered from
illness, humiliation and injury in your 28 years of imprisonment, but you have
sublimated this into a feeling of brotherhood and reconciliation between the
black and white population of your great country,
If violence is the burden of our
times, fair play is a basic need and perhaps even the key to solving the
problem of violence, as our late President, the honorable
Willi Daume once said.
When for the first time, after decades
of absence, a racially mixed team entered the Olympic arena of Barcelona in
1992, you Mister President, having played an essential role in this
normalisation process, were present in person to attend that event. The Olympic
ideal with its quest for peace became durably strengthened and made credible
trough your personal involvement.
This was without any doubt an
extraordinary act of fair play in the most profound sense of the term, and your
efforts have been acknowledged as such all over the world.
The International Committee for Fair
Play thus honors today
Mister Nelson MANDELA
as an exceptional example of a
personality who has applied the principles of fair play to public life,
principles which are the foundation not only of sport but also of all social
engagements in which the dignity and worth of each and every person is
respected.
Dr Norbert MÜLLER
Board member of the CIFP