At first glance, we may seem worlds apart – two women from different countries and
different generations. We met for the first time under the Olympic flame, and discovered
that we are not that different: we share the burning hope of a world where gender equality
is not a luxury, but the norm. When we walked side by side, sharing the great honor of
carrying the Olympic Torch through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, we represented
more than just ourselves. We were there representing all women and girls – half the world’s
population.
Historically, the Olympic Flame represents the value of purity and the runners who carry the
Olympic Flame convey a message of peace on their journey. While carrying the flame, at this
time of widespread conflict in the world, we thought of how important it is that women
contribute to peace processes. We know that when women are present at the peace table it
is considerably more likely that agreements will be signed and that peace will last.
We also
know that making peace is more complex than ending war. True peace comes to life
through the right to live free from fear of violence, free from discrimination, fulfilling our full
potential, in our families, communities, schools, work places, or sport fields. With every step
we took under that flame, we carried the Torch forward, and with it the message of Gender
Equality.
In that brief walk we followed pioneering women such as sailor Hélène de Pourtalès, first
female Olympic champion (1900); Enriqueta Basilio, first woman to light the Olympic
Cauldron at the Olympic Games in Mexico City (1968), and Flor Isava Fonseca, the first
woman to serve on the International Olympic Committee’s Executive Board (1990).
We carried the Olympic Flame cheering for the thousands of women athletes who will be
part of the Rio Games and who, with their swiftness and endurance in the sports arena,
increase women’s visibility as top-achieving sports icons, strategic thinkers, role models and
leaders. We also raised the flame for all the young women and girls in even the furthest-
flung villages who are fighting against all odds to play sport, stay on the field, and reap its
benefits of broader freedoms.
Since women’s first participation in the Olympics in 1900 they have brought down gender
barriers and reduced discrimination. Today, at the Rio Games, we are just under parity in
terms of participants and events. Yet outside, entrenched obstacles remain to full equality.
In Brazil, as in many other places around the world, adolescent girls and young women are
often pressured to conform to traditions and social stereotypes. They enjoy less autonomy
over their bodies, and often lack an environment that helps them develop sports skills. By
contrast their male counterparts enjoy new privileges as they grow up that are reserved for
men, including autonomy, mobility, and power. Globally, only one in five parliamentarians is
a woman; one in three women worldwide experiences violence against her, and without
change in the present rate of progress, it will take another eight decades for women to
achieve equality in work.
But change is coming from all directions, with international movements like UN Women’s
“HeForShe” where men take the initiative to stop discrimination and reshape expectations,
with the building of “Equal Pay’ campaign, and local programs like ‘One Win Leads to
Another’ in Brazil, where under-privileged girls in Rio de Janeiro will develop leadership skills
through sport, improving their ability to influence decisions that impact their lives at all
levels.
As we walked through Rio’s cheering crowds, we witnessed how sport unites people from all
walks of life with the power to rise above differences of sex, race, religion, and nationality.
We dared to hope that this flame will spread, and that the determination to achieve gender
equality will transcend all obstacles.
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