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Text: Denise MirásThe Rio 2016 Paralympic Games will take place 128 years after the first sport for people with a disability was organised – clubs for deaf people had been existence in Berlin in 1888

However, the roots of what would become the Paralympic Movement were laid by a Jewish German doctor, Lugwig Guttmann, in England during World War II

From the first Paralympic Games (in Rome in 1960) until today, the event has grown phenomenally, with the inclusion of many new sports, different types of physical conditions and levels of impairment

In recent decades, technology has been the catalyst for great evolutions

 Today, para-athletes test equipment that will be used by wider society, such a high-tech prostheses, in a similar fashion to how Formula One develops motor car technology

At the London 2012 Games, performances and public engagement exceeded expectations, overturning preconceptions, thrilling mass audiences and showing that Paralympic sports was now, without a doubt, high-perfornmance sport

‘Blade Jumper’ Markus Rehm aiming to break world record at Rio 2016With six months until the start of the Rio 2016 Games, we look back at the history of the Paralympic Movement

Understand the Paralympic Movement through sketching





1888 – Berlin in the vanguardIn the German capital, clubs promote the integration of people with impaired hearing through sport

1944 – Rehabilitation of war veteransThe British government employs Dr Lugwig Guttmann to work with injured soldiers returning from World War II

 1948 – Archery paves the wayOn the day of the opening ceremony of the London 1948 Olympic Games, Guttmann organises the first competition for wheelchair athletes, which he called the Stoke Mandeville Games

Archery is the sport and the competition involves 16 injured servicemen and women

1952 – Dutch join inWar veterans from the Netherlands participate in the next edition of the Stoke Mandeville Games, making it an international event

1960 – The first Paralympic GamesRome hosts the first edtion, with 400 athletes from 23 countries

From here, the Games are staged every four years

1964 – More types of impairments are embracedThe International Sport Organisation for the Disabled (IOSD) is created, offering opportunities to athletes who have not yet been able to take part in the International Stoke Mandeville Games: visually impaired, amputees, people with cerebral palsy and paraplegics

1976 – Hit the slopesÖrnsköldsvik in Sweden hosts the first edition of the Paralympic Winter Games, with 250 visually impaired and amputee athletes from 16 countries competing in Nordic and Alpine skiing

Stephanie Jallenby of the USA competes in the giant slalom at the Sochi 2014 Games (Photo: Getty Images/Tom Pennington)1982 – Joining forcesThe ISOD forms an alliance with the International Stoke Mandeville Games Federation (ISMGF), Cerebral Palsy International Sports and Recreation Association (CPISRA) and International Blind Sports Federation (IBSA), creating the International Co-coordinating Committee Sports for the Disabled in the World (ICC), whose aim is to organise the Paralympic Games

1986 – Growing strongerThe International Committee of Sport for the Deaf (CISS) and International Sports Federations for Persons with an Intellectual Disability (INAS-FID) join the ICC

Australia and Canada battle in the London 2012 wheelchair rugby final (Photo: Getty Images/Mike Ehrmann)1988 – Parallel GamesFor the first time, the Paralympic Games are staged in the same city as the Olympic Games – Seoul in the Korean Republic

The same thing happens in the next edition of the Winter Games, in the French town of Albertville 1992

1989 – Founding of the IPCThe International Paralympic Committee is founded as an international non-profit organisation in Dusseldorf, Germany to act as the global governing body of the Paralympic Movement

 2000 – Aussie spiritIn a society well organised for people with an impairment, Sydney develops further the Paralympic Games – even selling a wheelchair using Barbie doll in their official shops

2012 – Best Games yetA Belgian athlete and her guide dog parade at the London 2012 opening ceremony (Photos: Getty Images/Dan Kitwood)IPC President Sir Philip Craven declares the London 2012 Games the best ever, with record attendances and international broadcasting figures: 2

76 million tickets are sold and Channel 4’s innovative approach sets the benchmark for future broadcasts

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