Thessaloniki/Brussels, July 11th 2024
Tim Shriver, Chairman of Special Olympics, said today: “On behalf of the four million Special Olympics athletes we serve every day around the world, it is truly one of my greatest honors to accept the Empress Theophano Prize. Disability rights are human rights. Everyone has a right to participate in society. Everyone has gifts to celebrate. […] Our mission is bigger than the World Games we put on, bigger than the millions of volunteers and family members who give their time to make the possible a daily reality for one of the most marginalized populations in the world. Our mission is to create a truly unified generation that, together, through programming in sport, health, education, and community building, harnesses the power of our movement and amplifies our athletes’ voices to reach new audiences around the world with their powerful messages of dignity, resilience, and inclusion.”
Stavros Andreadis, Chairman of the Governing Council of the Theophano Foundation said: “In a world of diversity and adversities, it is fundamental to highlight the contribution of institutions such as Special Olympics, not only as a means for building more inclusive societies, but also as a benchmark for the power of human beings to overcome hardship and become an example of the joy of life.”
Herman Van Rompuy, former President of the EU’s European Council and Chairman of the Advisory Council of the Theophano Foundation said: “Special Olympics embodies the key values of the Theophano Prize: generosity, human dignity and togetherness across borders. It's 'special but it's great.”
The Empress Theophano Prize, a non-pecuniary award conferred each year after deliberation between the Advisory and Governing Councils of the Theophano Foundation, is designed to highlight those persons or organisations in Europe and beyond who embody European and universal values. Special Olympics shows the power of sport to overcome adversity and promote inclusion. Today’s Theophano Foundation prize is the fifth such award. Previous winners were the EU’s Erasmus student exchange programme, the inventors of the life-saving Covid vaccine, Dr Uğur Şahin and Dr Özlem Türeci, the globally respected pianist and maestro Daniel Barenboimfor his West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, and the United Nations, in the person of António Gutteres, UN Secretary General, for its contribution to world peace and international cooperation.
The city of Thessaloniki, the location of the Theophano Foundation, was the Byzantine Empire’s second city and, while it has suffered tragedy in its long history, it has since antiquity been a meeting place for people of all backgrounds and creeds and a wellspring of inspiration for Western Europe.
About the Empress Theophano Prize
The Empress Theophano Prize was created in order to reward individuals or organizations which have made, or are making, an outstanding contribution to building bridges among people, nations, ideologies and to improving mutual understanding of our diverse roots.
Since the establishment of the Prize in 2019, this initiative expresses, in the most noble way, the imperative and urgent need for contemporary cooperation. In 2020 the Prize, focused on Education, was awarded to the Erasmus Programme of the European Union. It was received personally by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. In 2021 the focus was on Science: Dr. Uğur Şahin and Dr. Özlem Türeci, the scientist couple who developed the first vaccine against the corona virus, were the recipients of the award for their dedication to the common good. In 2022, the Prize highlighted the key role of Art as a common ground for mutual understanding and was awarded to the world-renowned conductor Daniel Barenboim and his initiative of West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, a highly symbolic project for building bridges between peoples. In 2023 it was awarded to the United Nations and the UN Secretary-General, António Gutteres, focusing on the humanitarian role of multilateral leadership.
The Prize is awarded every year in the historic Rotunda in Thessaloniki, a landmark monument and heritage site signifying the multicultural influences of Europe: Roman, Byzantine, Orthodox, Ottoman, and Greek.
About Empress Theophano
Empress Theophano, who inspired this prize, is a historic figure of Europe who played a significant role in its development during the 10th century.
The niece of Emperor John I Tzimiskes, she married Otto II and was crowned Holy Roman Empress [words deleted]. Following his death, she maintained the title of Empress. Her historic presence in western Europe was dedicated to improving relations between East and West, offering a positive contribution to the cultural renaissance of western European territories, introducing to the West the central role women had in Byzantine society and bringing to bear significant influence from the flourishing Byzantine empire in the fields of education, the arts, commerce, and health, while working to advance civil governance, promoting it over the military.
Empress Theophano is buried at the Cathedral of St Pantaleon in Cologne, Germany.
About the Rotunda Monument
The emblematic monument of Thessaloniki was constructed in the early 4th century AD, at the turning point between the pagan and the Christian world, probably as a temple for ancient cult worship or as a mausoleum for Constantine the Great (306–337). This circular, domed building measures 29.80 meters in height and 24.50 meters in diameter. Its walls are 6.30 meters thick and can only be compared architecturally to the Pantheon in Rome. Not long after it was built and during the early years of the long-lived Byzantine Empire (330–1453), the Rotunda was turned into a Christian church with the addition of a sanctuary on its eastern side. The interior was decorated with Early Byzantine (4th–6th c. AD) wall mosaics of unique artistry and beauty. It was Thessaloniki’s cathedral church (metropolis) between 1524 and 1591, the year in which it was converted to a mosque by the Ottoman conquerors. It remained in use as a mosque until the city’s liberation in 1912. Its dedication since that time to Saint George (Agios Georgios) owes its origin to the small neighboring church of this name. The mosaic decoration of the Rotunda is a masterpiece of the art of late Antiquity.
Text source: http://galeriuspalace.culture.gr/en/monuments/rotonta/