Eunice Kennedy Shriver believed that people with intellectual disabilities were
far more capable than commonly believed and deserving of the same opportunities
and experiences as others. So, in June 1962, she invited 35 boys and girls with
intellectual disabilities to Camp Shriver, a day camp at Timberlawn, her home
in Rockville, Maryland (USA), to explore their capabilities in a variety of
sports and physical activities.
Even before Camp Shriver, Shriver already had a long-standing commitment to
people with intellectual disabilities. She was instrumental in focusing the
Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. Foundation on improving the way society deals with its
citizens with intellectual disabilities, and helping identify and disseminate
ways to prevent the causes of intellectual disabilities. Shriver is Executive
Vice President of the Foundation, which was established in 1946 by her father
and mother, Ambassador and Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy, to honor their eldest son,
who was killed in World War II.
Using Camp Shriver as an example, Shriver promoted the concept of involvement
in physical activity and competition opportunities for people with intellectual
disabilities. Camp Shriver became an annual event, and the Kennedy Foundation
gave grants to universities, recreation departments and community centers. In
1963, the Foundation supported 11 similar camps around the United States. By
1969, the Foundation supported 32 camps across the country that served 10,000
children with intellectual disabilities. The movement grew beyond the Kennedy
Foundation, and between 1963 and 1968, more than 300 camps similar to Camp Shriver
were started.
Let the Games Begin
In the early 1960s, Dr. William Freeberg, then Chairman of the Recreation and
Outdoor Education Department at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale,
Illinois, USA, worked with the Kennedy Foundation to develop one-week workshops
for recreation directors across the country. The workshops focused on the principles
that everyone, including people with disabilities, benefits from recreation,
and everyone has
talents and gifts to share with others. In 1965, 10 recreation teachers from
the Chicago (Illinois) Park District attended one of Freeberg’s workshops on
a grant from the Foundation. One of those teachers was Anne Burke.
Above,
athletes march into Soldier Field for the inaugural World Games in 1968; below
Special Olympics Algeria's delegation enters Dublin's Croke Park stadium —
more than 6,500 athletes participated in the 2003 Special Olympics World Summer
Games. [Top photo, Special Olympics archives. Bottom, Susan Kennedy, IRELAND
OUT]
By
1967, the Chicago Park District wanted to do more for people with intellectual
disabilities and Burke joined a team to assess the needs and how to address
them. She proposed holding a citywide track meet modeled after the Olympics
to raise awareness of the program. Freeberg, who had joined the team as a consultant,
suggested they develop a proposal to submit to Shriver at the Kennedy Foundation.
Shriver immediately saw the potential of the idea and asked Burke to expand
its scope to include more sports and athletes from across the United States.
Shriver sent
Kennedy Foundation staff to Chicago to work with Burke and the Chicago Park
District to start planning, and announced that the Kennedy Foundation would
provide a grant to underwrite the event. On 20 July 1968,
Shriver opened the Chicago Special Olympics (the First International Special
Olympics Games), which were held in Chicago's Soldier Field, with 1,000 athletes
with intellectual disabilities from 26 U.S. states and Canada competing in athletics,
floor hockey and aquatics.
“The
Chicago Special Olympics prove a very fundamental fact,” Shriver said in her
Opening Ceremonies address, “the fact that exceptional children — children with
mental retardation — can be exceptional athletes, the fact that through sports
they can realize their potential for growth.” Shriver also announced a new national
program — Special Olympics — to offer people with intellectual disabilities
everywhere “the chance to play, the chance to compete and the chance to grow.”
Chicago Mayor Richard Daley, who attended the First International Special Olympics
Games that day, said to Shriver, “You know, Eunice, the world will never be
the same after this.”
Special Olympics today is a global movement with 2.5 million athletes in 165
countries around the world. Follow its growth from 1962 to today in Special
Olympics Milestones.