Eunice Kennedy Shriver – Obit from SI

Jack McCallum’s piece was so good – he had a tremendous subject to write about – that I wanted to make sure it got another run.  The full article can be found at http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/writers/jack_mccallum/08/11/shriver/index.html, with an excerpt below.

(Excerpt)

Eunice Kennedy Shriver
Altruist and athlete, the Special Olympics founder saw the uplifting power of sports

For a while back in the 1930s the initials E.K. appeared several times on a board at the Hyannis Yacht Club on Cape Cod. They indicated the champion sailor for that particular year in the 18-foot wooden sloop division. Edward “Ted” Kennedy, the senator from Massachusetts and the last of nine children of Joseph and Rose Kennedy, would boast from time to time that they stood for “Edward Kennedy.” But if sister Eunice, 11 years his senior, was around, she would gleefully point out, “Teddy, you were only a baby at the time.”

The E.K.’s indeed belonged to Eunice.

Eunice Kennedy Shriver, the founder of a sports movement that changed the world, died early Tuesday morning at Cape Cod Hospital in Hyannis, Mass., with several members of America’s most famous family at her side. She was 88 and had battled for over a year after suffering a series of strokes.

Eunice received SI’s first Sportsman of the Year Legacy Award last December, recognizing her as the founder of Special Olympics and the single most important person ever in advancing the rights and enriching the lives of the intellectually challenged. There is virtually nowhere on earth that Special Olympics has not taken hold, the result of the vision and sweat of a woman driven by both her own boundless energy and the experience of her late sister. Rosemary Kennedy was born in 1918 (three years before Eunice) with an intellectual disability, into a world where the intellectually challenged were often not allowed in public, far less turned loose in athletic competition. Eunice decided she would do something about that.

But while Special Olympics is unquestionably her legacy, the Kennedy family as much remembers a woman who was an athlete herself, a feisty competitor, who, in the words of her son, Tim Shriver, now chairman of the Special Olympics, “insisted that the program started as a sports program and should stay a sports program.” That’s because Eunice was always an athlete at heart. She sailed, she swam, she was a graceful runner, she played varsity tennis at Stanford and she played quarterback in the family’s celebrated touch football games on the lawn at Hyannis. When she got too old to stand behind center, she would still call the plays. “I can still hear her,” says Bobby Shriver, the oldest of five children born to Eunice and her surviving husband Sargent Shriver.

“‘Okay, you go over there and knock the big kid over, so we can throw a pass to the little kid.’ She always wanted everyone involved, but she also wanted to win.” The image of the Kennedys as America’s Alpha Family was every much as evident in Eunice as in the male members of her tanned Camelot clan.

Eunice insisted, too, that every Special Olympics athlete take his or her competition seriously, so that a meet included not just love — one of Eunice’s early ideas was to have a “hugger” available for each athlete who finishes an event, a practice continues today — but also blood, sweat and tears. “One of the first things Mrs. Shriver ever told me after we met,” says 53-year-old Loretta Claiborne, one of the most celebrated Special Olympics athletes, “was that she was going to come out and watch me run. She took the sports seriously and looked on us as athletes. That’s important.”

What Eunice did — and she understood this from the beginning — was use sport as a vehicle to show what this misunderstood society of the mentally challenged could do. “Everybody told my mother that intellectually challenged kids would start crying if they lost,” says Bobby Shriver, “to which my mother said, ‘So what?’ ‘That’s what everyone does.’ Her thought was, you compete, you exalt if you win, you get sad if you lose and you go back and try harder.”  (The article continues at http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/writers/jack_mccallum/08/11/shriver/index.html)