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Beijing Paralympics end in splendor as host China looks to bright future
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With their unyielding spirit and unstoppable momentum, Oscar Pistorius, Natalie du Toit, Erin Popovich and Jonas Jacobsson shone on the track, in the pool or at the shooting range, scoring similar or even greater achievements as compared with their Olympic counterparts.

And some 44,000 Games volunteers, most of whom had served the Olympics, along with 1.4 million city volunteers, continued to render top-grade service and created a barrier-free environment for the Paralympians. Many of them missed their family reunions as the traditional Mid-Autumn Festival fell in the middle of the Games.

"It is all about spirit," said President Craven of the IPC. "The Paralympic spirit that is ever bright in our movement, found here in China, a kindred spirit."

And such spirits were celebrated and honored on Wednesday night, with awards and flowers.

Minutes after the closing ceremony began with a fireworks gala at 8 p.m., South African amputee swimmer Natalie du Toit and visually-impaired Panamanian runner Said Gomez received the Whang Youn Dai Achievement Award, which was initiated at the 1988 Seoul Games to honor athletes who best represent the Paralympic spirit at each Games.

Then 12 volunteers representatives stepped onto the podium, to receive flower bouquets presented by five newly-elected members of the IPC Athletes' Council, a token of gratitude from all Paralympians as well as the IPC.

The most dramatic moments of the night arrived when it was time for Beijing to say good-bye and London, the 2012 Games host, to say hi.

The outgoing host set its farewell party on a green lawn, which resembled an envelope but could magically turn into a garden with as many as 360,000 flowers sprouting out of the floor.

Kicking off a half-hour art performance, 600,000 red leaves, a typical autumn landscape on mountains surrounding Beijing and also a symbol of unforgettable love, poured down from the 44-meter-high rim of the Bird's Nest, and showered ceaselessly on both the athletes and performers for nearly five minutes.

On his way to the podium for the closing speech, the IPC chief Craven stopped his wheelchair and picked up two red leaves. Putting one into the pocket of his suit, as if collecting a piece of sweet memory, he handed the other to Liu Qi, the Games' chief organizer. And the two shook hands warmly.

"Xie Xie Xiang Gang (thank you Hong Kong), Xie Xie Qing Dao (thank you Qingdao), Xie Xie Bei Jing (thank you Beijing)," said Craven in Chinese amid thundering applause and roaring cheers of the ecstatic home crowd, before concluding his speech with a well-expected "Xie Xie Zhong Guo (thank you China)."

In contrast to Beijing's romantic and reminiscent touch, the eight-minute London handover performance, staged right after Beijing Mayor Guo Jinlong passed the Paralympics flag to his London counterpart Boris Johnson through Philip Craven, was full of vibrant rhythms and permeated with a light and brisk air.

A blend of orchestral and rock, pop and urban, and even with a brief tea break right in the middle of the show, the London performance demonstrated the city's vitality and unique charm, as well as its readiness to pursue the same splendor as what the Beijing Games have achieved -- but probably in very different ways.

And the presence of disabled dancers and a wheelchair basketball star in the show reminded the people of the special historical links between London and the Paralympics -- it was a historic archery competition among war-injured patients at the Stoke Mandeville Hospital just outside the British capital in 1948 that inspired the creation of a new worldwide sporting movement.

In consistence with its Olympic handover version more than 20 days ago, the London performance took place on a stage transformed from a double-decker bus, the city's icon. And when it ended, the bus was restored to its original form and cruised out of the Bird's Nest, formally carrying away the two Games.

At that moment, many of the 1.3 billion Chinese, especially those closely associated with the Games through their dedication and sacrifice, might have felt a sense of loss. But it shall not be hard for them to get over it, for the legacy of the Games will last, and so will the country's faith in the future.

(Xinhua News Agency September 17, 2008)

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