Dave and Andrea Kramer home from Greece
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July 9, 2011 |
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Dave Kramer,
Tim Shriver and Andrea Kramer in Athens,
Greece. |
Dave and Andrea Kramer, owners of the Stampede
Lake Studio, returned home from Athens, Greece,
last week after a three-week photo assignment
covering the final leg of the International Law
Enforcement Torch Run for the Special Olympics
World Summer Games.
Dave and Andrea were selected as two of three
photographers selected to document the event,
which began June 9 with the "Flame of Hope"
ignited by the sun's rays in Athens at the
sacred site of Pnyx. Traditionally the
"Guardians of the Flame," 100 law enforcement
officers from around the world, 10 Special
Olympics athletes and 30 support staff carried
the Special Olympics torch past the Acropolis,
the Odeon of Herod Atticus, the Acropolis Museum
and the Hellanic Parliament to a special
ceremony at Zappeion.
Dave and Andrea arrived in Greece June 6 with
other team members, and following the lighting
of the flame the final leg team was divided to
cover three routes on a journey throughout
Greece. The first route passed through Greece's
eastern mainland and the Sporades Islands,
ultimately passing through 40 Greek towns and
Constantinople.
Andrea was assigned to cover the second route,
which crossed the entire Peloponnese, western
mainland and the Lonian Islands. They held
ceremonies in 64 Greek towns, which included
speeches by a law enforcement torch bearer and a
Special Olympics athlete and torch bearer and
local officials.
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Dave Kramer
poses with the Special Olympics Flame of
Hope. |
Dave was assigned to route three, which
travelled to the island of Cyprus for two days
before continuing by ferry to other Agean
Islands including Crete, Sifnos, Paros,
AntiParos, Sangarini and Rhodes, ending at the
Palace of the Grand Master of the Knights in
Rhodes in a ceremony attended by Tim Shriver and
Maria Shriver Schwarzenegger.
On June 24, the three torchbearer teams met
again in Athens to run past all the hospitality
centers where the athletes participating in the
Special Olympics World Summer Games Athens will
be residing. The flame was delivered to the
Presidential Honor Guards at the Acropolis
Sacred Rock, where they guarded the flame
through the night, and it was returned to the
Torch Run team on the morning of June 25, who
carried the Flame of Hope to the Kallimarmaron
Panathenaikon (Marble) Stadium, where it was
used to light the cauldron to proclaim the
official opening of the Special Olympics World
Summer Games.
Despite the turmoil that nation is undergoing,
Dave said that each community treated the Final
Leg runners and the Flame of Hope with open
arms. He said that on arriving, they could hear
loud protests not far from their hotel, but
throughout their stay, none of the Special
Olympics Torch bearers ever felt threatened.
The Kramers, who have long been part of the
Idaho Special Olympics and participated in Law
Enforcement Torch Runs through the state for
years, called their trip to Greece amazing.
"What was impressive were the 10 Special
Olympics athletes selected to be part of the 10
teams that made up the Final Leg Torch Run
Team," Dave said. "One Special Olympics athlete
was assigned to each team, and it was always a
law enforcement officer and a Special Olympics
athlete up front, carrying the torch together.
These athletes carried the torch every step of
the way, and gave a speech at each ceremony."
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A Special
Olympics athlete and a law enforcement
officer carry the torch at the head of a
throng of jubilant runners as the Torch
of Hope nears the end of its journey. |
The Final Leg Torch Run Team, he said, was
comprised of law enforcement officers and
Special Olympics athletes representing 44
countries, but all came together as a single
team with a single mission, to proudly carry the
Flame of Hope to the summer games.
"We made new friends from around the world, and
are humbled to have been given the opportunity
to be part of this great event," Dave said.
While the run was underway, the three
photographers assigned to document the Final Leg
Torch Run posted their photos on-line to share
with the world, and over 400,000 availed
themselves the opportunity to follow their
progress. You can find their work at
www.flickr.com/photos/2011letrfinalleg.
Both Dave and Andrea are proud to support
Special Olympics, and they encourage others to
support the cause as well. You can learn more by
visiting the
Idaho Special Olympics website,
Special Olympics International, or the
Law Enforcement Torch Run. |
Questions or comments?
Click here
to email!
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