The Brilliance of Black Olympic Athletes in Rio 2016

The 2016 Olympics in Rio was a welcome retreat and reminder of the diversity of our world. Seeing the highest levels of athletic performance compete is inspirational.

Black athletes from around the world stepped to the highest level on the winners platform to claim their gold. Lilly Workneh, Black Voices Senior Editor of the Huffington Post compiled a comprehensive list of black athletes that won gold entitled, These Black Athletes Powerfully Dominated The 2016 Olympics, a portion of the article is below:

It’s official: The 2016 Rio Olympic Games have claimed their space in black history.

For some black Olympians this year, the road to Rio has been a tumultuous one. But these athletes, like many others, have sacrificed sweat, blood and tears to earn distinguished triumph. They’ve defeated the odds, broken barriers and set records in their journey to success ― many of which have earned them prestigious gold medals, some even in predominantly white sports, like swimming.

It’s time, then, to get acquainted with these incredible black athletes and all they’ve accomplished at this year’s Olympic Games.

(Photo credit:ODD ANDERSEN/AFP/Getty Images)

Simone Manuel: Team USA, Swimming

Gold medalist USA’s Simone Manuel celebrates her historic win at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games.
Simone Manuel, 20, made history on Aug. 11 when she became the first black woman to earn a gold medal in individual swimming. Manuel, who is from Houston, Texas, tied for the top place medal with Canadian Penny Oleksiak.

Manuel burst into tears following her epic win and acknowledged just how much the emotional victory meant to her and millions around the world. It’s a significant win, especially considering swimming’s racist past. “This medal is not just for me,” she said in an interview following her epic win. “It’s for all the people who believe they can’t do it.”

(Photo by Valery SharifulinTASS via Getty Images)

Simone Biles: Team USA, Gymnastics

Simone Biles of the USA performs her balance beam routine during the artistic gymnastics women’s individual all-around final event at the 2016 Summer Olympic Games.
Simone Biles is a formidable force on Team USA’s majority-minority Olympic gymnastics group this year. At 19-years-old, Biles has distinguished herself as the world’s most dominant gymnast. Her accolades are astounding: She is the only woman to win world championships for three consecutive years. She arrived in Rio undefeated in all the gymnastic meets she’s competed in since 2013.

Biles has generated excitement from people around the country, and the world, who recognize her unbridled success and have praised her powerful performances. After all, she is the epitome of Black Girl Magic and a truly incomparable athlete: “I’m not the next Usain Bolt or Michael Phelps,” she told Sporting News after accepting her second gold medal. “I’m the first Simone Biles.”

(Photo by: Robert Maxwell/Oxygen Media/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images)

Gabby Douglas: Team USA, Gymnastics

Gabby Douglas is an unstoppable force on America’s Olympic gymnast team.
Gabby Douglas made headlines during the 2012 London Olympics when she won gold and became the first African-American to win the individual all-around title.Now, she’s continuing her legacy at this year’s Rio Olympics where she helped Team USA win gold in gymnastics. Although she’ll be unable to defend her title in the all-around finals, Douglass still played a critical role in the team’s success this year.

Douglas has soared despite being subjected to unfair public scrutiny of her actionsand appearance. However, her sense of perseverance and confidence are well-admired. “I have these challenges and circumstances and for me I love it,” she toldThe Huffington Post in a previous interview. “It determines if I’m going to give in, give up or push that limit and achieve my goal.”

(Photo by David Ramos/Getty Images)

Rafaela Silva: Team Brazil, Judo

Rafaela Silva of Brazil celebrates after winning the gold medal in the Women’s -57 kg Final – Gold Medal Contest on Day 3 of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games.
Rafaela Silva is now an international star. On Aug. 8, Silva won the gold medal in the 57-kilogram division for women’s judo. It was an honor she accepted with tears in her eyes as she claimed Brazil’s first gold medal at the Rio Olympics. But it was also an accomplishment that came after much personal adversity.

As a black woman born in one of Brazil’s impoverished favelas, Silva constantly combatted heavy racism from residents who still uphold a strong anti-black sentiment. “She has faced countless obstacles, injustices, and oppression in her young life,” one HuffPost blogger wrote in a piece published on HuffPost Brazil. “But the judo athlete showed incredible courage to overcome everything on her way to a win gold in her hometown’s Olympic Games.”

 

(Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post via Getty Images)

Almaz Ayana: Team Ethiopia, Track and Field

Almaz Ayana of Ethiopia reacts to winning the gold and setting the world record (29:17.45) in the women’s 10,000-meter race.
Ethiopian runner Almaz Ayana broke two records during one match on Aug. 12 when she set new highs for both the Olympic and world records in the 10,000-meter race in Rio.

Ayana, who represents Ethiopia in the Rio Olympics, finished the race in superb timing, which left many around the world astounded by her athleticism. Even sports commentators who watched her performance in real-time were in awe: “I cannot believe what I am witnessing here,” one NBC commentator said. “What we have witnessed is one the finest athletic achievements we’ve ever seen.”

Photo by David Ramos/Getty Images

Ibtihaj Muhammad: Team USA, Fencing

American Olympic fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad faces the media during a press conference.
Ibtihaj Muhammad shattered stereotypes when she represented Team USA in this year’s Olympics and became the first American athlete to compete while wearing a hijab, which is the headscarf worn by Muslim women.

Muhammad, who is black female fencer, did not win gold in the women’s individual sabre fencing competition but she did win the hearts of millions of people around the world who admire the work she has done to dispel myths around Muslim women. “In this particular political climate in the history of this country, it is groundbreaking to have a Muslim woman on the U.S. team,” she previously told BBC. “I am excited to challenge the stereotypes and misconceptions people have about Muslim women.”

REUTERS/Alessandro Bianchi

Michelle Carter: Team USA, Shot Put

Michelle Carter of Team USA poses with the gold medal.
Michelle Carter is a self-proclaimed “diva,” a certified professional makeup artist and the first American woman to win the gold medal in shot put. Carter even beat her father’s record, who competed in the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics and placed silver in the men’s competition.

For Carter, winning the gold medal means everything. As a full-figured athlete, Carter said she constantly combats criticism from others who ridicule her size. But she has a strong feminist message for the haters: “I’m in a sport where people don’t look at us like women, they don’t look at us like being girls, or feminine,”Carter said. “But I’ve been girly all my life and so I couldn’t separate… between the sport and being a woman.”

(Photo by Tim Clayton/Corbis via Getty Images)

Usain Bolt: Team Jamaica, Track & Field

Usain Bolt of Jamaica strikes his ‘Lightening Bolt’ pose after winning the Men’s 100m Final at the Olympic Stadium.
Usain Bolt proved he is still the fastest man in the world when he took home the gold medal on Aug. 12 in the 100-meter men’s dash. For Bolt, an 11-time world champion, this win marks his third consecutive gold medal at the Olympics.

Bolt announced that this year’s Olympics will be his last but, his athleticism has earned him prestige that will allow his legacy to live forever. “I have done everything, and have proven myself,” he said during a press conference following his latest win. Indeed he has.

(Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

Kristi Castlin, Brianna Rollins, Nia Ali: Team USA, Track & Field

Bronze medalist Kristi Castlin, gold medalist Brianna Rollins and silver medalist Nia Ali of the United States celebrate with American flags.
Three black women made a historic win on Aug. 17 when they took home the top awards at the Women’s 100m Olympic Hurdle. American runners Kristi Castlin, Nia Ali and Brianna Rollins were awarded the bronze, silver and gold medals, respectively, marking a truly unforgettable moment (and photo) from the Olympics.

Click here to read the original article from The Huffington Post. 

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