DUBAI. — Nelson Mandela used sport as a catalyst for tolerance and unity when South Africa were still fighting the after-effects of the apartheid era, according to Kirsty Coventry.
The Minister of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation in Zimbabwe and Africa’s most decorated Olympian with seven medals, was speaking at the International Sports Creativity Conference at the Hilton Al Habtoor on Monday. Coventry used the example of the then South African President, whose effort to unify the country, saw him rally behind the Springboks to lift the Rugby World Cup trophy at home in 1995. “This time also, South Africa had a black captain in Siya Kolisi when they won the title in Japan,” she said.
“Sport is all about friendly antagonism where all the animosity is shrugged off at the end of contest,” said Daniela Bas, Director of Social Policy and Development of United Nations in the opening session titled “Sports Language of Tolerance”. The conference had experts from different fields deliberating on the idea of tolerance and peace through sport. The first session “Sports Language of Tolerance” saw Bas in conversation with Mohammad Rashwan, Olympic medallist and role model in Sports Ethics from Egypt, while the second session “Sports Diplomacy” had Coventry and Tunisian Sports Minister Sonya Bin Al Shaikh in conversation. — Gulf News.



