Father of the now controversial Olympics, Pierre de Coubertin enters the Grévin museum

by time news

2024-04-05 14:28:15

A wax statue bearing the image of the baron born in 1863 will be included in the museum’s collection before the Paris Olympic Games. Racist and sexist remarks attributed to him by historians have made him a controversial figure.

Father of the modern Olympic Games in 1896 but a controversial personality today for positions considered misogynistic and racist, Pierre de Coubertin will have his wax statue at the Grévin Museum before the Paris Olympics, the Parisian establishment announced.

The statue of the French baron, born in Paris in 1863, will enter the museum in July, before the start of the Olympic Games (July 26 – August 11). It is currently being produced in workshops in the 13th arrondissement.

Convinced of the virtues of sport, Pierre de Coubertin had the visionary idea of ​​reviving the Olympic Games of ancient Greece. The first edition of the modern Olympics took place in Athens in 1896, with only 300 athletes (two-thirds of whom were Greek), 14 countries and three continents represented, and nine sports on the program (compared to around forty in Paris this year). Two years earlier, the baron had founded the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

It is to Pierre de Coubertin that popular memory attributes the maxim “the important thing is to participate”. In reality, it was inspired by a sermon by the Bishop of Pennsylvania, Ethelbert Talbot, during the London Olympics in 1908. The baron died in Switzerland in 1937 at the age of 84. A year earlier, he had not attended the Olympic Games organized in Berlin by the Nazi regime. He nevertheless supported its holding, reports The Parisian.

Racism and misogyny

Over the years, he has become controversial because of certain opinions, however widely shared in his time and in his environment. In his Memoirs, he described himself as “a fanatical colonialist”, recalls the City of Paris in a biographical note published on its website.

“Races are of different value, and to the white race, of superior essence, all others must owe allegiance,” he said, according to another quote reproduced on the Paris town hall website.

“The Olympic Games must be reserved for men. A female Olympics would be uninteresting, unsightly,” he also judged.

“He evolved throughout his life, he often changed his mind. But he is much more complex than the few sentences that come out each time,” explained his great-great-niece, Diane de Navacelle de Coubertin, near Le Parisien. “We reduce it to writings that shock us today. At the time they were not shocking,” she added.

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