The Olympic Oath, recited at the opening ceremony, is not a mere ceremonial formality but a key sacred text of the "Olympic religion" conceptualized by Pierre de Coubertin. This concise text performs functions analogous to religious symbols of faith: it concentrates the core tenets of olympism, serves as an act of public commitment to these ideals, and creates a ritual framework for all subsequent competition. As a symbol of faith, the oath exists in three dimensions: as a historically evolving text, as a performative ritual, and as an object of constant reinterpretation and debate.
The idea of the oath was directly borrowed by Coubertin from ancient practice, where athletes took an oath before the statue of Zeus in Olympia, obligating themselves to adhere to the rules and fight fairly. Reviving the Games, Coubertin saw the oath as an instrument of moral purification of sport.
The First Oath (Antwerp, 1920): Written personally by Coubertin, it was recited by the Belgian fencer Victor Buan. Its text was concise: "We swear that we will participate in these Olympic Games in the true chivalrous spirit, for the glory of sport and in the name of the honor of our teams." The emphasis was on chivalry (a key concept for Coubertin) and the honor of the team.
The Addition of the Judges' Oath (1972): After numerous judges' scandals in Munich, a separate oath for judges and officials was introduced, emphasizing the universality of ethical requirements.
Incorporation of the Doping Issue (2000): Under pressure from the growing doping scandal, the text of the athletes' oath at the Sydney Games was expanded. The phrase "respecting and adhering to the rules, in the true spirit of sport, without doping and drugs" was added. This was a response to the crisis of faith in the purity of sport.
Current Version (since 2021): At the Tokyo-2020 Games, the phrase about unity, solidarity, and inclusivity was added to the text — "in the name of the unity of our sport and our Olympic family, in the name of respect for the fundamental principles of olympism." This was a response to modern challenges of discrimination and isolation.
In this way, the text of the oath has evolved, responding to ethical challenges of the era, thereby resembling a living religious tradition interpreting the canon in new conditions.
An analysis of the text of the oath allows us to identify its main "dogmas":
Dogma of fair play: "adhering to the rules." This is the foundation of the "sacred law" of Olympic competitions.
Dogma of purity and asceticism: "without doping and drugs." An analogy to the requirement of ritual purity.
Dogma of chivalrous spirit and respect: "in the true spirit of sport, for the glory of sport and the honor of our teams." It establishes an ethical ideal that surpasses mere victory.
Dogma of belonging to the community: "in the name of the unity of our sporting and Olympic family." It emphasizes the corporate nature of the "faithful."
Dogma of loyalty to the ideal: The act of reciting the oath itself is an act of loyalty to higher principles, not personal ambitions.
The performative aspect of the oath is no less important than its text. The ritual is meticulously regulated:
The Elect: The oath is recited by one athlete on behalf of all participants (since 1972 — also one judge). This is a figure of the consecrated, a delegated representative of the community.
Sacred Place and Time: The action takes place on the central stadium arena during the opening ceremony — an analogy to the main liturgy.
Symbolic Gestures: The athlete holds the corner of the Olympic flag in his left hand — touching the sacred relic. Raising the right hand is an ancient gesture of an oath addressed to the heavens (in this case — to the Olympic ideals).
The Community's Response: The ritual is concluded with the stadium's applause, symbolizing the collective "Amen" — acceptance and confirmation of the oath.
This ritual transforms the athlete from a mere participant into a bearer of a mission, burdened with responsibility before the entire "Olympic family."
Like any symbol of faith, the Olympic oath exists in a field of tension between ideal and reality, giving rise to crises of legitimacy.
Doping: The systematic violation of the oath "without doping" by leading athletes and entire programs is the most serious challenge. Each revelation undermines the sacred status of the text, turning it, in the eyes of skeptics, into an empty formality.
Political Boycotts and Wars: The oath "in the name of unity" sounds especially bitter in the context of boycotts of the Games (1980, 1984) or invasions. The unity of the "family" turns out to be a fiction.
Commercialization: The oath, speaking about "honor," contradicts the realities where athletes are walking brands, and the Games are a giant business enterprise.
In this context, the act of reciting the oath can be considered not as a confirmation of fact but as the recitation of a spell — an attempt to magically hold reality from falling into final chaos of greed and deceit.
First Violator? At the second (for the oath) Games in Paris (1924), the Finnish runner Paavo Nurmi, later a legend, was accused of violating the amateur status (receiving money), which put his solemn oath into question.
Collective Violation: At the Mexico City Games (1968), American athletes Tommie Smith and John Carlos, raising fists in black gloves on the podium, violated not only the political neutrality but also the implicit code of behavior stemming from the oath, putting social justice above the "unity of the family."
Symbol of Hope: In 2021 in Tokyo, the oath was recited by two: a Japanese man and a Japanese woman on behalf of the athletes, and two, a man and a woman, on behalf of the judges. This was a gesture towards gender equality, an attempt to infuse the old text with a new, relevant meaning.
The Olympic Oath as a symbol of faith exists in a dual state. On one hand, it is often a cynically violated formality, demonstrating the gap between high ideals and low practice in big sport. On the other — it is an unchanging ritual core without which the Games lose their claim to a spiritual dimension and turn into pure commerce.
Its strength does not lie in the fact that everyone abides by it, but in the fact that it is recited. The very fact of preserving this ritual, its evolution in response to challenges, and the solemn atmosphere of its recitation testify to the deep need of the sports community (and spectators) for a transcendent ideal. The oath serves as a secular prayer — a reminder of what sport should be, even if it is not. It is the conscience of the Games, their ethical tuning fork, sounding at the beginning of the event to set the height, which, unfortunately, is not always reached. It is in this constant tension between word and deed, between the oath and its violation, that the drama of modern olympism lies.
© libmonster.com
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