Puneet Varma (Editor)

1968 Summer Paralympics

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Host city
  
Tel Aviv, Israel

Athletes participating
  
750

Opening ceremony
  
November 4

Nations participating
  
28

Events
  
181 in 10 sports

Closing ceremony
  
November 13

The 1968 Summer Paralympics (Hebrew: המשחקים הפאראלימפיים ה-3‎‎) were the third Paralympic Games to be held. Organised under the guidance of the International Stoke Mandeville Games Federation (ISMGF), they were known as the 17th International Stoke Mandeville Games at the time. The games were originally planned to be held alongside the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City, but in 1966, the Mexican government decided against it due to difficulties. The Israeli government offered to host the games in Tel Aviv, a suggestion that was accepted.

Contents

The opening ceremony took place in the Hebrew University stadium at the Givat Ram campus in Jerusalem and the games took place in Ramat Gan, near Tel Aviv, at the Israel Sports Center for the Disabled. The closing ceremony took place in the Tel Aviv Trade Center. Therefore, these games were the first in Paralympic history to not be held concurrently with the Olympic Games.

Sports

Lawn bowls was included in the program for the first time. In wheelchair basketball, a women's team event was added, as was a 100 m wheelchair race for men in athletics.

  • Archery
  • Dart archery
  • Athletics
  • Lawn bowls
  • Snooker
  • Swimming
  • Table tennis
  • Weightlifting
  • Wheelchair basketball
  • Wheelchair fencing
  • Medal table

    The top ten listed NOCs by number of gold medals are listed below. The host nation, Israel, is highlighted.

    Participating delegations

    Twenty-eight delegations took part in the Tel Aviv Paralympics.

    Having made its Paralympic Games début four years earlier, South Africa continued to compete at the Paralympics, by sending a delegation to the Tel Aviv Games. It was, at the time, banned from the Olympic Games due to its policy of apartheid, but it was not banned from the Paralympics until 1980.

    References

    1968 Summer Paralympics Wikipedia