English, asked by Jyotikook, 11 months ago

Justify the title of the poem 'Nine Gold Medals'​

Answers

Answered by gratefuljarette
3

Nine Gold Medals

Explanation:

  • The writing "Nine Gold Medals" by David Roth. The idea of the poem is Special Olympics with a center on the importance of understanding, truthfulness, fellowship, cooperation, and kindness.
  • The author gives the information that the sense of truthfulness and pity for fellow human beings is also valuable than getting a sports tournament.
  • These features help us in getting the difficulties of fellow human beings. Moreover, they assist us in deciding struggles and producing answers to their difficulties.
  • So, we should try to absorb these essential values into sports sooner than adjusting on getting rewards and prizes in sporting competitions and oppositions.

TO LEARN MORE:

Central idea of nine gold medals - Brainly.in

https://brainly.in/question/4068300

Write a summary of the poem Nine Gold Medals. - Brainly.in

https://brainly.in/question/154095

Answered by harshit3535
3

Answer:

Explanation:

Nine Gold Medals by David Roth: Summary & Analysis

By Jayanta Kumar Maity / David Roth

Nine Gold Medals: About the poem

‘Nine Gold Medals’, written by the American Rock vocalist David Roth, is a song that inspires human compassion and cooperation. The poem is based on a story about the nine differently-abled athletes in a Special Olympic event. In a race, when one runner fell to the ground, all the others stopped and returned back to help him stand on his feet and then they walked hand-in-hand to finish the race. Each of the athletes was awarded a gold medal in recognition of their outstanding show of empathy and compassion.

Background

Variations of the song are available on the internet. But the version sung by the Scottish singer Iain MacKintosh in 1996 is included in the ICSE board collection ‘Treasure Trove’. Though MacKintosh mentioned it as ‘a true story’ in his introduction, an online report claims it to be partly true. According to the folks at the Special Olympics Washington office, the incident happened at a 1976 track-and-field event held in Spokane, Washington. A contestant did take a tumble, and one or two of the other athletes turned back to help the fallen one, culminating in their crossing the finish line together, but it was only one or two, not everyone in the event. The others continued to run their race.

Similar questions