ago.05.2007

About 800 teenagers, including 50 physically challenged youth, from across the world will attend the Olympic Youth Camp (OYC) during the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.

Disabled youths will take part in such an exercise for the first time in OYC's history.

Every National Olympic Committee will send a girl and a boy to the 21-day camp, which will be held from August 6-26, 2008 at the China Youth Center for International Exchange.

Aged between 16 and 18 years,the youths will get a first-hand experience of the Olympic ideals of peace, enterprise, teamwork, sportsmanship, fair play and participation as well as the unique Chinese culture.

They will watch the Games, visit the Olympic Village, stay with local families, travel to famous historical sites and learn Chinese Kongfu and calligraphy, among other things. Some of them will participate in the Olympic torch relay, too, attend the 2008 Games’ Opening and Closing Ceremonies and sports events.

The concept of the youth camp originated at the 1912 Stockholm Olympic Games, when King Gustav V invited 1,500 Boy Scouts to set up tents near the Olympic Stadium. There were no more camps after that till another Scandinavian city, Helsinki, took up the idea in 1952. The experience proved so successful that an OYC has been held during every Olympic Games after that, except in Melbourne (1956) and Los Angeles (1984).