Vancouver 2010 Games torch lit in Olympia

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October 22, 2009 16:40 IST

The torch relay for the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics got underway on Thursday, with the sun's rays igniting the silver torch during a brief break in the clouds at the ancient Olympic stadium.

It was the first time in the last four winter Games torch-lighting ceremonies that the back-up flame from the previous day's dress rehearsal at the site of the ancient Olympics did not have to be used.

Actress Maria Nafpliotou, playing a High Priestess calling on sun God Apollo, knelt in front of a parabolic mirror reflecting the sun's rays that seconds later ignited the torch.

The ceremony kicked off an eight-day torch relay throughout Greece, including the country's ski resorts, before the torch is handed over to Vancouver Games organisers in the Panathenian stadium in Athens, site of the first modern Olympics in 1896.

On October 30 the flame will arrive in Canada for the biggest-ever domestic relay, covering 45,000 kms and ending in Vancouver on Feb. 12, the date of the Games opening ceremony.

"By February 12, it will have visited over 1,030 Canadian communities, received 119 Aboriginal blessings, touched three oceans and been held by a mosaic of Canadian people representing all ages, cultures, religions and languages," Vancouver Games chief John Furlong said in a brief speech.

The ceremony and relay, first introduced ahead of the 1936 Berlin Games, was a far cry from the Beijing 2008 Games ceremony, which was marred by human rights protests.

After the global protests that followed Beijing's torch relay, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) decided to scrap international relay legs.

"The longest national Olympic torch relay in history will create a spirit of global community and world citizenship," said IOC president Jacques Rogge.

The relay's first runner, Olympic skier Vassilis Dimitriadis, dressed in full winter gear on a warm autumn day, set off from the ancient Olympic stadium which was hosting the winter Games ceremony for the first time.

Dimitriadis briefly stopped at a marble memorial where the heart of the founder of the modern Olympics, Pierre de Coubertin, is buried before starting off the 2,000-km journey through Greece.

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