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HISTORY OF CONSEIL
INTERNATIONAL DU SPORT MILITAIRE (CISM) |
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Five
founding nations –Belgium, Denmark, France, Luxembourg and
the Netherlands- created CISM while meeting in Nice at a
fencing event on 18 February 1948. Although they were only
European countries, CISM founding nations did have a global
project in mind.
This desire among the military to meet in sports arenas
instead of battlegrounds was nothing new in 1948. Indeed,
just after the First World War, the first Interallied Games
were organized upon the initiative of General Pershing and
his entourage with 18 nations representing five continents.
In 1919, 1500 athletes competed in 24 different sports in
front of a large audience in Joinville in the Paris suburbs.
Following the Second World War, the Allied Forces Sports
Council was revived. The second Interallied Games were held
in Berlin in 1946. Only athletics competitions were
organized. The desire to meet among soldiers was stronger
than the need to produce striking sports achievements at all
costs. On May 1946, the Allied Forces Sports Council was set
up, namely by Colonel Debrus and Major Mollet who were among
the founding fathers of CISM two years later. Unfortunately,
because of political discord, the Allied Forces Sports
Council was extinguished in 1947. However, the ideal was
rekindled the following year with the founding of CISM and
the rise of a global vision.
Since its
foundation in 1948, CISM’s universality became increasing
real, developed as it was by the Presidents and Secretaries
General who led the organization over the years. In 1950,
Argentina and Egypt joined the –by then – nine European
countries. In 1951, it was the USA’s turn to join. In 1952,
Iraq, the Lebanon, Pakistan and Syria became members.
Over the years, membership has progressed at a steady pace.
The mergence of Cold War and the setting up of SKDA- a
military sports organization whose member nations were also
members of the Warsaw Pact-denied CISM the official
universal status it want craved and needed to be recognized
by the IOC. But the political turnoil at the end of the 80’s
and more specifically the fall of the Berlin wall all of a
sudden gave renewed impetus to CISM’s expansion . In the
space of just four years (1991-1995), 31 new member
countries joined the organization.
Such rapid progress led to recognition by international
institutions as the IOC .
Another important event in CISM history occurred in
September 1995 with the organization of the 1st Military
World Games in Rome. CISM has become, with its 132 member
nations, its annual world, continental and regional sports
calendar, the high level of its competitors (The
International Military Sports Council can no longer keep
track of the countless world and continental champions who
are also renowned for their exploits within civilian
competition), one of the biggest sports institution in the
world. |
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Volleyball History |
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Volleyball was
created in 1895 by William George Morgan in the United
States of America. Basketball was the trendy sport of the
time but it was considered too energetic, heavy & tiring for
elderly people. Morgan, who worked at the Holyoke,
Massachusetts YMCA, intended to create a team sport without
any physical contact between the opponents, thus reducing
the risks of injuries. He then thought of a sort suitable &
less tiresome to the eldest members of the YMCA: a net like
those used on tennis courts was set up at a height of 1,83
meters & the players were supposed to hit a ball over it.
The basic idea was to use the hands to throw the ball, over
the net, to the other side, & that's the origin of a game
called Mintonette, which quickly became popular as
volleyball.
In South America, Peru was the first country where the sport
was played. It happened in 1910, when an American mission
was hired by the Peruvian Governement to organize the
country's primary education. There is still some uncertainty
about the origin of the sport in Brazil. While some sustain
that volleyball was played for the first time at the Colegio
Marista, in Pernambuco, others say that it was introduced by
the YMCA of Sao Paulo, circa 1916.
The FIVB (Federation Internationale de Volleyball) was
founded in 1947 & two years later the first World
Championship took place, only for men. In 1952, the event
was played also by women.
The first South-American Championship was held at the
gymnasium of the Fluminense Futebol Clube, in Rio de
Janeiro, between September 12 & 22, in 1951.
Volleyball was introduced in the Olympic Games in 1964 & it
has remained - with increasing success - until today. At the
1992 Olympic Games, the Brazilian Men's Volleyball Squad
became the first among all Lusophone nations to win a
Collective Sports Olympic Gold Medal. The feat was
accomplished once again in 2004 & in 2008, the Brazilian
Women's Squad won its first Olympic Gold Medal.
the championship to be held in Rio de Janeiro between June
21-30, 2009, is an initiative of the International Council
of Military Sports (CISM) & will serve as a preparatory
event to the Military World Games V, in 2011. The
competition will take place at the Maracanazinho Stadium &
at the School of Physical Education of the Army (EsEFEx). |
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