Black folks continue to pose for Olympic Iconography.
After her all-around win Biles said, “I don’t want to compete with Rebeca no more. I’m tired. I’ve never had an athlete that close, so it definitely put me on my toes and it brought out the best athlete in myself.”
BLACK ENTERPRISE can not highlight a moment that will likely go down in the Olympic annals without harkening back to arguably the greatest Olympic photo ever. Track and field athletes, Tommie Smith and John Carlos, American born Black men, stamped their names in history for throwing up Black power fists on the Olympic podium at the 1968 Mexico Olympics.
In the midst of the Civil Rights Movement, Black women and men marched, organized and some were brutalized in the name of equal rights. Smith and Carlos, while chosen to represent the U.S., did not receive the same freedoms as other U.S. citizens. Smith and Carlos lifted the Black fist salute on an international stage as a way to amplify the message of Black Americans. Their message was clear as they stood in silent protest.
There was a price to be paid as Smith and Carlos were both exiled from the remainder of the games and received harsh criticism once returning to the U.S. Both have spoken out over the years detailing the trials they faced as a result of their actions. Yet they endured.
The photo of Olympic greatness, persistence and defiance is referenced often when speaking of memorable Olympic iconography. Biles, Chiles, and Andrade are in legendary company.
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Source: Black Enterprise