- Special Olympics Canada
Special Olympics Canada is a national organization created to help people with
intellectual disabilities develop self-confidence and social skills throughsports training and competition.About
Special Olympics Canada is dedicated to enriching the lives of Canadians with an intellectual disability through sport. It is a national not-for-profit grassroots organization that provides sport training and competition opportunities for 31,000 athletes of all ages and abilities. More than 10,000 certified volunteer coaches are currently involved with
Special Olympics programs every day in virtually every community nationwide. Special Olympics Canada has been part of a world-wide organization for over 30 years. Special Olympics Canada National Games are held every two years, alternating between Summer and Winter Games with World Games being held in the year following National Games.Special Olympics Canada's programs are supported by corporate sponsorship, fundraising activities, government funding, individual donors and the involvement of volunteers in communities across the country.History
In the early sixties, testing of children with
intellectual disabilities revealed that they were only half as physically fit as their non-disabled peers. It was assumed that their low fitness levels were a direct result of mental retardation. A Toronto researcher and professor,Dr. Frank Hayden , questioned this assumption. Working with a control group of children on an intense fitness program, he demonstrated that, given the opportunity, intellectually disabled people could become physically fit and acquire the physical skills necessary to participate in sport. His research proved that low levels of fitness and lack of motor skills development in people with mental handicaps were a result of nothing more than a sedentary life style. In other words, their intellectual disabilities resulted in their exclusion from the kinds of physical activity and sports experience readily available to other children.Inspired by his discoveries, Dr. Hayden began searching for ways to develop a national sports program for intellectually disabled people. It was a goal he eventually achieved, albeit not in Canada. His work came to the attention of Eunice Kennedy Shriver and the Kennedy Foundation in Washington, D.C., and led to the creation of Special Olympics. The first sports competitions organized under the Special Olympics banner were held at
Soldier Field inChicago in1968 . To ensure that Canada was represented, Dr. Hayden called on an old friend,Harry "Red" Foster .The late Harry "Red" Foster was an outstanding sportsman, a famous broadcaster, a successful businessman and a humanitarian whose tireless work on behalf of people with an intellectual disability had already brought him international acclaim. Inspired by his mother's devotion to his younger brother, who was both blind and intellectually disabled, Mr. Foster began early in his career to devote much of his time, energy and wealth to addressing the problems faced by individuals with an intellectual disability and their families.
Accompanying a floor hockey team from Toronto to those first Games in Chicago, "Red" was quick to see in Special Olympics a further opportunity to enhance the lives of intellectually disabled Canadians. Upon returning to Canada he set about laying the foundation for the Special Olympics movement. The following summer,
1969 , the firstSpecial Olympics Canada event was held inToronto . From that modest beginning, the Special Olympics movement quickly spread across the country and grew into the national sports organization it is today.Official Special Olympics Canada Sports
Winter Sports
* Alpine Skiing
* Cross Country Skiing
* Curling
* Figure Skating
* Floor Hockey
* Snowshoeing
* Speed SkatingSummer Sports
* Aquatics
* Athletics (Track & Field)
* Bowling (5 & 10 Pin)
* Power-lifting
* Rhythmic Gymnastics
* Soccer
* SoftballExternal links
* [http://www.specialolympics.ca Special Olympics Canada]
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