Secretary-General's message to the 2003 United States Open Tennis Championship Draw Ceremony
Statements | Kofi Annan, Former Secretary-General
You come at a time of great sadness for all of us at the United Nations. We have violently lost many beloved colleagues. We are grieving for them. But we know they would tell us to get on with the job. And that is why we were determined that this event should go ahead today.
Tennis and the United Nations have important features in common. Here at the United Nations, we see many long and dramatic contests. We see quite a few tie-breakers and nail-biting fifth sets, as well as the odd disputed line call. And yes, there are some issues which seem to be hit interminably back and forth over the net.
But there are more important common features than these. Like the United Nations, tennis is universal. There are few sports which are played and loved so widely. Players from 61 countries are expected to take part in this year's US Open, which will be televised in 165 countries.
Yet the most important impact of tennis, as with the United Nations, is at the local level. Communities in rich and poor countries alike are directly touched by the game. Young people, whether they dream of winning the Grand Slam or of finding their way out of poverty, find in tennis, as in other sports, an important focus of physical fitness and development of character.
That is why I am delighted that today's draw ceremony is held here at the United Nations, and why I send the organizers and players my best wishes for a successful Open.
I also send my thanks to Vijay Amritraj, one of my Messengers for Peace, for his initiative in proposing that today's event be held here at the United Nations. He is a symbol of the universal appeal of tennis and of its capacity to build bridges into local communities, and I am glad that he is with you today.