The Olympic flame, one of the key symbols of modern Games, has deep ancient roots. In Ancient Greece, a sacred fire was constantly maintained on altars in sanctuaries, including Olympia. It was lit from sunlight using a parabolic mirror, symbolizing a connection with the divine. However, the ritual of the torch relay is an invention of the 20th century. It was revived within the idea of promoting "olympic ideals" and was first implemented at the 1928 Amsterdam Games, where a flame burned in a special bowl above the stadium. But the climax was the introduction of a large-scale relay by initiative of Karl Dümmer, the organizer of the 1936 Berlin Games. It was then that the flame was first lit in Olympia and delivered by runners through several countries to the capital of the Games. This ritual, despite the political context of the time, firmly entered into olympic practice thanks to its spectacularity and profound symbolism, embodying continuity, peace, and the pursuit of perfection.
Over the years, a strict ceremony has been established, regulated by the International Olympic Committee (IOC). Its key elements remain unchanged:
Lighting in Olympia. Several months before the Games, the high priestess in the temple of Hera in ancient Olympia focuses sunlight with a parabolic mirror to obtain the fire. The ceremony includes dances and prayers reminiscent of ancient traditions.
The Relay. The flame is passed from torch to torch. The route usually runs through the host country and sometimes through other countries, symbolizing the unity of peoples. Torchbearers include not only athletes but also public figures and ordinary citizens who have contributed to the development of their communities.
Lighting the bowl at the stadium. The climax of the relay is the culmination of the opening ceremony. The bowl, often an architectural masterpiece, is lit by the last torchbearer (or group). The method of lighting is kept strictly secret and becomes one of the most memorable moments of the Games.
While the ceremony remains conservative, its form of implementation constantly evolves thanks to technology.
Torch Design. Each host country creates a unique design reflecting its culture. For example, the Sochi-2014 torch resembled a phoenix and used an innovative combustion system resistant to extreme weather conditions. The Tokyo-2020 torch was made of aluminum waste and had the shape of a cherry blossom flower, and hydrogen was used for its ignition, emitting no CO₂.
Delivery Routes. The flame has traveled not only on foot. It has moved by canoe, on a camel, in sleds pulled by reindeer, on a locomotive, by plane, in a spacecraft (as a symbol in 1996 and 2000, and in 2014 it visited the ISS and even "walked" in outer space), underwater (at the Great Barrier Reef in 2000), and even as a laser beam (when transferring from Athens to Vancouver in 2010 through a satellite).
Opening Ceremonies. Technologies allow for the creation of grand shows. The flame can be carried by a robot (Atlanta-1996), lit by not one person but a group (Calgary-1988) or an entire stadium (in Lillehammer-1994, the flame was lit by a ski jumper "landing" in the bowl). In Beijing-2022, a huge snowflake bowl was lit by two athletes, placing their torches on it, symbolizing eco-friendliness and modesty.
The Olympic flame is an object of interdisciplinary study. Historians analyze its genesis and political use (for example, the 1936 relay as an instrument of Nazi propaganda). Sociologists view it as a powerful media and consolidating symbol for the host nation. Engineers and chemists solve complex tasks related to creating a sustainable flame that works in a hurricane, underwater, or in the thin air of high mountains. Culturalists note its role as a "ambassador of peace," crossing borders.
The Moscow 1980 Olympic torch was extinguished at least three times and had to be lit with a lighter, which was carefully concealed.
The 2004 Athens relay became the first global one: the flame covered more than 78,000 km and visited all continents.
In 1976 in Montreal, the flame was "transformed" into a radio signal: the heat of the flame in Athens activated a sensor that sent a pulse through a satellite to Ottawa, where a laser lit a new torch.
The London-2012 torch design, perforated with 8000 holes, symbolized the number of torchbearers, and its triangular shape – the motto "Faster, Higher, Stronger".
Thus, the Olympic flame represents a unique synthesis of ancient ritual and modern technology, politics and sports, national identity and universal ideals. The torch relay, continuously evolving, remains a living metaphor of humanity's pursuit of light, peace, and progress.
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