What did the Ancient Greeks ever do for us?

Part of the Great British Garden on the Olympic Park. Copyright the author 2012

Part of the Great British Garden on the Olympic Park. Copyright the author 2012

The buzz around Gamesmakers has now turned to what volunteering legacy might there be once the Olympic and Paralymic Games have long left the shores of Britain and Stratford in East London has returned to some semblance of normality(poverty, overcrowding and all the usual inner London problems). I have given this considerable thought and indeed I have been thinking about it for some considerable time. That’s because I volunteered well before the Olympics reached Britain.

Clearly politicians have thought about it too. It has become a catalyst in Tory thinking for their Big Society ideas. It is not though a Tory notion and any proposals that are put forward that it is, should be rigorously rejected. Most of the 250,000 original applicants and the lucky selected 70,000 volunteers eventually selected, put themselves forward anything up to 7 years ago is the truth.

But what of the legacy of spontaneous sports volunteering? Can it be harnessed in the future outside the sports arena? I certainly hope so. Many Gamesmakers were already avid volunteers in their favorite sport and many had volunteered in other non-sporting roles like myself.

There were though, still thousands of Gamesmakers that had never before volunteered. So what will they be doing after the Games have left town? I hope they will see this as an opportunity to become involved in the voluntary sector on a regular basis now they have had a flavour of what volunteering can do for one’s self esteem. As Aristotle put it – Eudaimonia  or welfare and happiness as it might be translated today.

We can learn much from what the Greeks said about volunteering or civic virtue as they may have expressed it. However, you’ll be pleased that today is not a day for ancient history. If we did we might end up convincing ourselves  that volunteers were the modern day equivalent to the slaves in ancient Greece! So best not go there.

Whatever manifests itself in both organized and unorganized format, I trust it’s the voluntary sector that becomes the real benefactor.

London2012: Shame on LOCOG Charging for 7/7 Bomb Victims and Families to watch The Games

Attack: This bus was destroyed by a bomber in Tavistock Square, London in 2005

It’s a bad start to the day when the news is of LOCOG charging for the ‘free’ tickets for survivors and the families of the victims of the July 7th bombings in 2005. OK so they are not charging the people themselves, but they are charging the taxpayer £221,000 according to the Mail report.

 

It seems a callous act to HD to even think of getting money back for the free tickets that the London mayor had promised them.

 

‘The GLA offered tickets to the families of the 52 people killed in the attacks and to 91 others who sustained ‘serious injuries’.  This was particularly poignant because the attacks on July 7, 2005, happened the day after the capital won its bid to host the Games…’

As a taxpayer, I am happy to foot this bill. If you have read from the start of HD’s journey you will know that the London bombings were the reason why he is a GAMESMAKER today. If I and 70000 others can do this for nothing (and may I add a lot of additional traveling costs as well) then an organization as big as LOCOG could forget their ticket receipts on this occasion. Shame on LOCOG’s men in suits and their innate greed!!!

Read the report