Song of victory for Brazil's marvelous city
by Guest Column 03/10/2009, 04:55
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva stood at the front of the delegation about to delivery Rio de Janeiro's merits as a
potential Olympic host and suddenly found himself breaking into song with his compatriots.
Brazil's tropical heart beat to the rhythm of Rio's anthem,
Cidade Maravilhosa (Marvelous City), in chilly Denmark: "Marvellous
city, full of a thousand charms. Marvellous city, the heart of my
Brazil."
"Someone started to sing, I don't know who. But we all sang,"
Rio bid deputy chief Carlos Roberto Osorio told the German Press
Agency dpa.
"We all sang it - of course, Lula too. We were as if in a
football locker room, lined up in twos. And that gave us the
motivation to go in. We went onto the pitch, and I think we did
well."
The Rio team marched before the International Olympic Committee
(IOC) and made their case. Their result speaks for itself, after a
66-32 thrashing of Madrid in the final round of voting to bring the
first-ever Olympics to South America in 2016.
Marvellous City gave way to a "marvellous presentation," a model
of how to make the most of every moment to put across a clear
message without wasting any effort. Neither Chicago nor Madrid
could say the same about their own presentations.
Eight hours after the song was heard in Copenhagen, Lula's face
was red and partly covered in a white handkerchief.
Brazil's first-ever working-class president could not control
his own emotions, weeping uncontrollably.
He stood one step from Jacques Rogge, who presides over an
infamously elitist organization, the IOC. The separation, though
just 1 metre, could hardly have been bigger, but Lula managed to
close the distance: "I want to thank Rogge for his affection,
though the president is always very serious."
And, then, Rogge Relaxed. Cidade Maravilhosa again rang through
the room, sung by members of the Rio delegation, joined by quite a
few Brazilian journalists. Then came the cry: "Lula, Lula."
Never in the IOC history had the signing of a contract with an
Olympic city been so festive.
Lula called Friday possibly the "most emotional" day of his
life.
"The other countries came here with proposals," he said. "We
came with our heart and our soul."
Throwing his fist in the air, The Brazilian leader threw his
fist into the air.
"We're first class!" Lula declared. "We wanted a chance to show
that we are competent, that we can do things as well as Germany,
the United States, as any other country in the world. I hope we're
all alive in 2016 to hold the best Olympic Games on the planet."
Lula, who has already announced he will not seek re-election
beyond his current term, which ends on January 1, 2011, denied that
he had beaten US President Barack Obama, who came to Copenhagen to
support his own home town Chicago's bid.
"When Obama's plane arrived here, some colleagues said, 'Ah,
we've lost,'" Lula conceded. "God wanted him to come and let us win
anyway."
It was not divine intervention but the Brazians themselves who
deserve credit for their victory, according to Richard Carrion, an
influential IOC member from Puerto Rico.
"Rio's presentation was very good," he told dpa. "When it ended
and we went to lunch, everyone already thought that Rio was going
to win."