Thursday, February 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

'Human Rights Medal:' Olympic Swim Champion Mark Tewksbury Gives Medal To Winnipeg Museum

The Canadian Press, 24 Jul, 2015 12:57 PM
    WINNIPEG — Swimming legend Mark Tewksbury says it's only fitting that he present his gold medal from the 1992 Olympic Games to the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg.
     
    Tewksbury says he couldn't have won the 100-metre backstroke in Barcelona if he hadn't had the support of people who knew he was gay.
     
    He says that support was particularly important because it came at a time when it wasn't OK to be open about homosexuality.
     
    Tewksbury, who came out publicly in 1998, says he felt unsafe doing so before then.
     
    He has since become an advocate for the rights of athletes of all sexual orientations and gender identities.
     
    His medal will be part of a new exhibition at the human rights museum that explores the power of sport to inspire positive change.
     
    “I’ve always said for me that medal is a human rights medal," Tewksbury said Thursday. “It was done because someone created a space for me to be me.”
     
    The Calgary swimmer recalled the days leading up to the 1992 Games and how he began to feel it was time to be more open about being gay. He turned to his technical swim coach Debbie Muir.
     
    “I’ll never forget being at a restaurant downtown. The moment had come. I said, ‘Debbie, I have to tell you something.'
     
    "I said the words. I said, ‘I’m gay.’ And she welled up with tears. She said, 'I can’t imagine how hard it’s been for you all these years. Know that you have someone 1,000 per cent behind you.”
     
    Tewksbury says sharing it with someone was such a relief that it gave him a boost at the Games.
     
    “I remember being in the ready room, surrounded by the best swimmers in the world. For my entire career, being gay had been a negative, a liability. And in that moment, I looked around the room and I thought to myself what makes me different from these guys? I’m gay!
     
    "I owned it. I was totally empowered. And I went out there, set a personal record and won the gold medal.”
     
    Tewksbury said there’s still a long way to go before LGBTQ athletes are accepted in sport, but he added the momentum is there now for more rapid change.
     
    "It takes education to confront discrimination and create a world where everyone has the basic human right to be themselves. Sport is an important venue for raising awareness — and so is this museum."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Shaken City Of Vancouver Workers Return To The Job After Co-worker Shot Dead In Burnaby

    Shaken City Of Vancouver Workers Return To The Job After Co-worker Shot Dead In Burnaby
    VANCOUVER — The City of Vancouver confirms a veteran employee is the man fatally shot in a targeted attack in Burnaby, B.C.

    Shaken City Of Vancouver Workers Return To The Job After Co-worker Shot Dead In Burnaby

    B.C. Posts $1.68 Billion Surplus, Up From $184 Million Forecast In Feb. 2014

    B.C. Posts $1.68 Billion Surplus, Up From $184 Million Forecast In Feb. 2014
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's finance minister says a higher-than-expected budget surplus leaves room for modest family initiatives but he's wary of escalating forest-fire costs and signs of economic downturns in Canada and internationally.

    B.C. Posts $1.68 Billion Surplus, Up From $184 Million Forecast In Feb. 2014

    B.C. Judge Says He Gets Man's Frustration But Threat Still Nets Firearms Ban

    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A Kamloops, B.C., man who threatened to drive his truck through the front doors of a hospital with a shotgun has been issued a one-year firearms ban.

    B.C. Judge Says He Gets Man's Frustration But Threat Still Nets Firearms Ban

    Vancouver Police Guard City Work Sites, While RCMP Probes 'Serious Incident'

    Vancouver Police Guard City Work Sites, While RCMP Probes 'Serious Incident'
    Vancouver police, meanwhile, issued a release saying they've taken the "unusual steps" of securing public works yards and job sites due to a threat against a City of Vancouver employee

    Vancouver Police Guard City Work Sites, While RCMP Probes 'Serious Incident'

    'Extremely Dry' Level 4 Drought Declared For Lower Fraser And South Coast

    'Extremely Dry' Level 4 Drought Declared For Lower Fraser And South Coast
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's Forests Minister says soaring temperatures and paltry rainfall have pushed the province's most heavily populated region to the highest alert level on the drought scale.

    'Extremely Dry' Level 4 Drought Declared For Lower Fraser And South Coast

    Man Says He's Physically OK After Blast That Killed Two Workers At B.C. Mill

    Man Says He's Physically OK After Blast That Killed Two Workers At B.C. Mill
    BURNS LAKE, B.C. — A worker who escaped a Burns Lake, B.C., sawmill where an explosion killed two people says he didn't initially realize his face, hands and wrist were severely burned.

    Man Says He's Physically OK After Blast That Killed Two Workers At B.C. Mill