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- <text>
- <title>
- (Aug. 03, 1992) Benvinguts to the Catalan Games!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Aug. 03, 1992 AIDS: Losing the Battle
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- OLYMPICS, Page 54
- 1992 SUMMER GAMES
- Benvinguts to the Catalan Games!
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Barcelona flashes its many stylish differences as the arc of
- the opening arrow begins the dazzling five-ring show
- </p>
- <p>By Pico Iyer/Barcelona
- </p>
- <p> Imagine a proud, serious old man, not without some
- gruffness. Imagine that he is a prosperous merchant, having made
- enough money, on his own terms, to indulge himself in moments
- of whimsy, flashes of dandy vanity. Imagine further that he has
- seen empires and invaders come and go. Now, having dusted the
- furniture and repainted the house, he throws open the doors to
- his elegant old home to reveal...a dazzle of tropi-colored
- tricks.
- </p>
- <p> That was a little how it felt as Barcelona, the often
- unshaven but designer-crazy capital of Catalonia, set flame to
- the Games of the 25th Olympiad. The occasion was a golden
- opportunity for presenting the city as a shiny new capital of
- a postnational world. It was also a quadrilingual glimpse into
- a multicultural future. Music at the celebrations that opened
- the Games came from an atlas of names--Ryuichi Sakamoto,
- Angelo Badalamenti (of Twin Peaks fame), Andrew Lloyd Webber;
- Placido Domingo was followed by a sea of "living sculptures"
- designed by a man from the West Indies. And some of the grandest
- cheers of all came as the unfamiliar Lithuanian flag hung over
- costumes fashioned by Issey Miyake.
- </p>
- <p> As soon as the opening ceremonies began, moreover, records
- began falling like tenpins: the most nations competing (172),
- the most athletes in attendance (almost 11,000, or five times
- as many as in the Winter Games), the highest number of
- television viewers (a projected 3.5 billion). But numbers did
- scant justice to emotions: to the sense of quiet pleasure as one
- of the first teams to enter was South Africa, here after a
- 32-year absence; to the shiver of unease as Iran alone paraded
- behind a man, not a woman, bearing its name; to the bewilderment
- that met the Unified Team, amid its cacophony of 12 republics'
- flags. And when Bosnia-Herzegovina appeared, after an
- eleventh-hour entry, people rose spontaneously around the stands
- to cheer.
- </p>
- <p> The most prominent country in the early going, however,
- had been one that did not march but made its presence felt at
- every turn: independent-minded Catalonia, which is determined
- to cast these as the Catalan, not the Spanish, Games. A longtime
- enemy of Castile, delighting in a language that Franco had
- banned, Barcelona was eager not just to show off its faster,
- higher, stronger self--reconstruction is almost as trendy as
- deconstruction here--but to emphasize its distance from the
- Spain of myth, and of Madrid. FREEDOM FOR CATALONIA signs (in
- English) were draped from balconies and shoulders, and buttons
- and stickers proclaiming Catalonian independence were handed out
- even to kids from California. The Catalan flag, four bloodred
- fingers on a field of yellow, seemed to be fluttering from every
- window--28 of them on a single building!--and not one
- Spanish banner was in sight. As the opening arrow approached,
- every other shop seemed to be saying benvinguts--"welcome" in
- the new Olympic language of Catalan--to what was locally known
- as the Jocs Olimpics.
- </p>
- <p> In a deeper sense, though, the weathered, down-to-earth
- city seemed too rooted and too various to be greatly
- transformed by pervasive Cobi (as the Olympic mascot is called).
- Barcelona appeared ready to take over the world, and not the
- other way round. In Seville, when the Olympic torch arrived on
- its way to the opening ceremonies, crowds flocked into the Plaza
- de San Francisco to snap up Cobi dolls, key rings and T shirts,
- and catch a flash of history. In Barcelona, by contrast, life
- continued as usual. It flows and crests from dawn to dawn here:
- sunny Sunday mornings watching the albino gorilla in the zoo;
- early evenings in the stained-glass quiet of Santa Maria del
- Mar; late, late evenings with thrashing guitars at the
- penumbral nightclub KGB. Old women dance stately sardanes in
- front of the cathedral, and men in silk ties ride scooters to
- the office. Smiling pickpockets filch bank notes from the
- wallets of sightseers while placing roses in their hair.
- </p>
- <p> In the balmy beach-front Olympic Village, as the teams
- began arriving, 50 or more Iranians could be seen sitting in
- rows in dull beige uniforms, like nothing so much as condemned
- POWS, fending off questions about why their team consisted of
- 40 men and zero women ("Their records are not strong." "Women
- are not interested in sports"). On the other side of the room,
- Enos Mafokate, the lone black member of South Africa's
- equestrian contingent, was red-eyed with exhaustion and
- excitement. "For 30 years," he said, "I have dreamed of this.
- When they told me I was going to the Games, I could not open my
- mouth for three hours. I could not even move my jaw. This is
- something I will never forget!"
- </p>
- <p> Around him, other athletes were pounding away at a Super
- Monaco GP video game, driving through a simulated Monte Carlo,
- even as the stars of the U.S. basketball team were in the real
- Monaco, driving the lane. Their performances were eagerly
- anticipated. Along the main promenade of town, the tree-lined
- Ramblas, sidewalk artists had already added Magic Johnson's face
- to the standard repertoire of Marilyn Monroe and Emperor
- Hirohito, and copies of Magic's biography were piling up next
- to canine pianists, peep shows and Ecuadorian panpipers.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, more and more newcomers could be seen trying to
- figure out a city where pijamas are desserts and streets have
- periods in the middle of their names (Paral.Lel). Journalists
- were struggling to work out why three different coins were worth
- a peseta (less than a cent) and whether the regal Placa de
- Catalunya really was enhanced by an enormous inflatable M & M.
- More than a half-century ago, Barcelona, the city of seasoned
- oppositionists, had been all set to hold the "People's Games,"
- to counter the Hitler Olympics of Berlin. But civil war
- interceded. Now, as fireworks lighted up the sky above the
- pulsing stadium and competitors consulted Video Tarot screens
- in the glittering subway stations, prospects all round seemed
- bright enough to bring a confident smile even to the face of a
- grizzled old man.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-