Что такое олимпийский день?
Олимпийский день - это праздник спорта, здоровья и лучших возможностей. Он приглашает всех по всему миру быть активным.
Участники со всего мира будут отмечать день, когда Международный олимпийский комитет был основан в 1894 году.
И вот как вы можете принять участие в выпуске 2020 года, приняв участие в официальной олимпийской тренировке.
Когда олимпийский день?
Олимпийский день состоится в этом году во вторник, 23 июня 2020 года, и люди во всем мире будут праздновать, активизировавшись. Вы можете присоединиться!
Олимпийцы были источником вдохновения и мотивации в эти трудные времена своей энергией и позитивом: их домашние тренировки помогли нам продолжать двигаться, а их истории держали нас внимательными во время блокировки.
23 июня Олимпийское движение будет праздновать Олимпийский день, создав крупнейшую в мире 24-часовую олимпийскую тренировку в цифровом формате.
Узнайте больше в этом видео:
Станьте активными 23 июня с нашей олимпийской тренировкой
ПОЛУЧИТЕ АКТИВНО В ЭТОМ 23 ИЮНЯ С НАШЕЙ ОЛИМПИЙСКОЙ ТРЕНИРОВКОЙ
Кто может принять участие в олимпийском дне?
Но вам не нужно быть олимпийцем, чтобы принять участие.
Присоединяйтесь к нам на день, полный спортивных тренировок под руководством спортсмена от таких гимнасток США, как Лори Эрнандес, пятикратный олимпийский чемпион Франции по биатлону Мартин Фуркад, звездный борец Индии Винеш Фогат, восходящий лыжник Китая Гу Айлин Эйлин и сенсация Тонга Пита Тауфатофуа ,
В этот день пришло время #StayHealthy, #StayStrong и #StayActive!
Check out the full schedule of the athlete-led workouts on @Olympics Instagram and pick your favourite athlete to work out with!
All timings are UTC on 23 June (except where noted).
10 pm (22 June): Pita Taufatofua (Tonga)
11 pm (22 June): Tyla Nathan-Wong (New Zealand)
1 am: Melissa Wu (Australia)
2 am: Yamamoto Seito (Japan)
3 am: Zhang Hong (China)
4 am: Marcus Fernaldi Gideon (Indonesia)
4 am: Jonatan Christie and Anthony Ginting (Indonesia, on the @olympicchannel Instagram)
5 am: Elizabet Tursynbaeva (Kazakhstan)
5:30 am: PV Sindhu (India)
6 am: Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi (Pakistan, on the @olympicchannel Instagram)
8 am: Zeyad Eashash (Jordan, on the @olympicchannel Instagram)
8 am: Margarita Mamun (Russia)
9 am: Cameron van der Burgh (South Africa)
9 am: Johanne Defay (France, on the @olympicchannel Instagram)
9 am: Abdullah Sediqi (Refugee Team, on @refugeeolympicteam Instagram)
10 am: Desire Operanozie (Nigeria)
11 am: Cherif Fall (Senegal)
2 pm: Hugo Calderano (Brazil)
3 pm: Mikel Thomas (Trinidad and Tobago)
4 pm: Rommel Pacheco (Mexico)
5 pm: Natalie Spooner (Canada)
6 pm: Kyla Ross (United States)
#OlympicDay is going to be fun!
Here is your schedule for our workouts on Tuesday - where in the world will you be joining us from?#StayActive
The 2020 edition is the first to go truly global, online, to ensure we can all still #StayActive in the safest way possible despite restrictions because of the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic.
But we can trace the beginning of Olympic Day all the way back to 1947.
Doctor Josef Gruss, a Czech IOC member, presented the idea of a World Olympic Day at the 41st Session of the International Olympic Committee in Stockholm that year, proposing a day be set aside to celebrate everything that the Olympics stands for.
A few months later the project got the nod at the 42nd IOC Session in St Moritz in January 1948. The National Olympic Committees were put in charge of organising this event and the date celebrates a special moment in the history of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), which was founded at the Sorbonne, Paris, on 23 June 1894, where Pierre de Coubertin rallied the revival of the Olympic Games.
The first ever Olympic Day was celebrated on 23 June 1948.
Portugal, Greece, Austria, Canada, Switzerland, Great Britain, Uruguay, Venezuela, and Belgium organised an Olympic Day in their respective countries and Sigfrid Edström, IOC President at the time, relayed a message to the young people of the world.
In the 1978 edition of the Olympic Charter, the IOC recommended for the first time that all NOCs organise an Olympic Day to promote the Olympic Movement:
“It is recommended that NOCs regularly organise (if possible each year) an Olympic Day intended to promote the Olympic Movement.”
In recent years, many people have organised Olympic Day runs all over the world to celebrate.
First launched in 1987, the run was about encouraging all National Olympic Committees (NOCs) to celebrate Olympic Day and promoting the practice of mass sport.
It's been a huge success, growing from 45 participating NOCs in the first edition in 1987, to more than a hundred participating NOCs.
Last year in 2019, for example, the Czech Olympic Committee was delighted to report that over 75,000 people took part, including over 60,000 children, in Olympic Day races across the Czech Republic.
2020 is overcoming some restrictions on large gatherings by organising virtual runs, in addition to the official Olympic Day Workout, so check online for races you can join today!
Find yourself on the Virgin Islands for example?
Get involved!
But Olympic Day now is so much bigger than a run, a workout, or a single sporting event.
National Olympic Committees are getting creative worldwide basing efforts on the three pillars of “move”, “learn” and “discover” to engage everybody - regardless of age, gender, social background or sporting ability.
Some countries have even incorporated the event into the school curriculum.
Everybody can be part of Olympic Day, and with so many people doing so many things this Olympic Day, why not join the fun?
Whether it's by joining the official Olympic Day Workout with us, or getting active in a different way, let us know your involvement by commenting on our social media channels.
Are you ready to work out with world-class athletes around the globe?
On June 23, get ready to feel like an Olympian by taking part in the #OlympicDay workout, all day LIVES on our Instagram. #StayActive