Aside from the Refugee Team, the Palestinian squad will be the only one at the Paris 2024 Olympics with the majority of its athletes living outside their home country.
Of the eight athletes, six were born or currently reside abroad — in Saudi Arabia, Dubai, Germany, Chile, and the United States.
Training in Palestine has become almost impossible following the war between Hamas and Israel.
Among the more than 38,000 fatalities of the war, around 300 were athletes, referees, coaches, and other sports personnel, according to the technical director of the Palestine Olympic Committee.
Only two athletes of the Palestinian Olympic squad stayed in Palestine: Runner Mohammed Dwedar, from Jericho, and featherweight boxer Wasim Abu Sal, from Ramallah.
Wasim Abu Sala is the first athlete in history to represent Palestine in the Olympics.
Despite being only 20 years old and having already won two international medals, he told Euronews that it wasn't at all an easy ride.
He trained in Palestine during the war and will return home with the conflict likely still ongoing.
"For me, it has always been very difficult because in Palestine there are not many other athletes to train or interact with, but I never gave up."
"Before the war, I competed in the Asian Championships. It was nice to be there with other athletes from the diaspora, from Gaza, from the West Bank. In the end, they became like my brothers. But some of them died in the war. Another one, a young boxer, lost an eye during the occupation, and with it, his dream."
One of the most prominent Palestinian athletes to die in the war was long-distance runner Majed Abu Maraheel. He became the first Palestinian to compete in the Olympics at Atlanta96.
He died of kidney failure earlier this year after being unable to receive treatment in Gaza or be evacuated to Egypt, Palestinian officials said.
Palestine's eight athletes at the Olympics will compete in boxing, judo, swimming, shooting, track and field and taekwondo.
Only one Palestinian athlete, taekwondo's Omar Ismail, qualified for the Paris Games in his own right. The seven others gained their spots under a wild-card system delivered as part of the universality quota places.
Backed by the International Olympic Committee, it allows athletes who represent poorer nations with less-established sports programs to compete, even though they do not meet the sporting criteria.
But Abu Sal isn’t concerned with how he qualified—thanks to a wild card. What matters to him now is what happens next.
"I am the first Palestinian boxer at the Olympics. I have the wind at my back, not just a participant, but a contender," he told Euronews.
No Palestinian athlete has ever won an Olympic medal.
Palestine Olympic Committee Director Nader Jayousi
The website maxtravelz.com is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.
I’m cheering from the banks of the Seine in a plastic rain poncho, my dress soaked and loafers sloshing. The rain has not let up once during the four-hour Opening Ceremony, but as we watch boatloads of beaming athletes float past us one by one waving their national flags, my smile could not be wider. By the time the evening comes to an end, Celine Dion is belting Hymne a l'amour from a glittering Eiffel Tower—some in the crowd cry, others dance, or FaceTime family—and a contagious sense of universal joy ripples across Paris.
Paris est une fête! Especially during the Olympics. The French title of Hemingway’s legendary memoir A Moveable Feast is an apt encapsulation of what can only be called a dramatic vibe shift in the French capital in the last few weeks. Indeed, Paris is a party. The opening ceremony elated even the most hardened of local skeptics of the Olympic Games—locally: les Jeux Olympiques, the JO. Since then, the city has been suspended in a Disney-esque euphoria; the JO is now a multi-week carnival of good cheer.
Martini in hand and pursuing another, I stumble to the bar—not because I’m drunk but because the bar itself is moving. I’m on the Venice Simplon-Orient-Express, A Belmond Train, Europe; specifically, in Bar Car 3674, swathed in sapphire velvet and buzzing with passengers in their black-tie best for cocktail hour. Outside, the landscape unfurls gradually, the industrial tableaus of France’s heartland fading into fields baking under the summer sun. Golden hour has hit; onboard, cufflinks and jewels catch the light and shine. There’s a mirthful sparkle to the crowd, guests and crew alike, made even more apparent by our close quarters on the train. As I sidle past a woman in a sequined dress, our crystal coupes meet by chance in a delicate clink. She and I exchange introductions and share a proper toast: We’re finally here.
Minister of Tourism, Hon. Edmund Bartlett, departed the island for Paris, France yesterday (August 7) to attend the Olympic Games. While in Paris Minister Bartlett will be instrumental in promoting Jamaica as a premier tourist destination through the Jamaica Tourist Board’s (JTB) Jamaica House initiative.
The Paris Summer Olympic Games are coming to an end this weekend, but there are still plenty of disciplines to go, including a new sport at the Games this year: breaking.
France knocked out world and pan-American football champions Argentina after winning 1-0 in Bordeaux on Friday, in a heated game that ended with a massive brawl that followed more than ten minutes of stoppage time.
For many, the last full month of summer—that means August here in the United States—makes way for one more family getaway before school starts. Otherwise, you might sneak in a cheeky goodbye-to-summer barbecue; don’t get too smug when you tell everyone how much money you saved by using points and miles this season. (Or maybe do. Be a good friend. Teach them our ways of traveling with points and miles.)
With the Games of the XXXIII Olympiad (commonly known as the 33rd Summer Olympic Games or Paris 2024) now open, the State of Utah received official word on the eve of the opening ceremonies that The Beehive State has been selected to host the 2034 Winter Olympic Games, in its return to the United States. Utah was the last American location to host the Winter Olympic Games in 2002.
When the announcement came that the Summer Olympics would be held in Paris in 2024, I was psyched. I'm an American but live in the Marais district of Paris with my French partner, Benjamin.