Molly had been “upstairs doing her laundry,” says Maria, 65, who jokes that her niece “was shocked that she was not included in this call.” That’s because Molly is the chairwoman of the Special Olympics Founder’s Council, a group of six Shriver cousins whose goal is to push for the more inclusive future their grandmother Eunice envisioned for people with disabilities even before her brother John F. Kennedy became president.
“My grandmother walked the walk and sprinted the sprint,” Molly, 23, tells PEOPLE in this week’s issue. “To show people the importance of something, you have to do it — and that came to her so organically.”
Molly Shriver and Christina Schwarzenegger.

The family says the “heart root” of Eunice’s activism was her sisterRosemary Kennedy, who was born with intellectual challenges and underwent a disastrous lobotomy in 1941 that left her with the the mental capacity of a toddler and in need of a wheelchair. But Eunice saw possibilities in Rosemary where others saw limits.
“There was never anything that my grandmother didn’t think she could do,” says Christina.
Rosemary Kennedy and Eunice Shriver with Edward Moore in 1938.Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty

For Molly, who grew up 10 minutes from Eunice in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts, that meant suiting up for races.
“My grandma built this pool with a wheelchair ramp just so that Rosemary could get in, and then she would make me have a swimming competition against 80-year-old Aunt Rosemary,” she says, laughing. “I don’t know many people who know their great aunt. I was fortunate.”
Clockwise: Christina Schwarzenegger, Molly Shriver, Tim “Timbo” Shriver Jr., Tommy Shriver, Natasha Hunt Lee, Kathleen Shriver.Courtesy Special Olympics

Along with Molly and Christina, 29, their cousins Tim “Timbo” Shriver Jr., 32, Kathleen Shriver, 27, Natasha Hunt Lee, 24, and Tommy Shriver, 21, have all pledged to carry Eunice’s Special Olympics torch. As members of the inaugural Founder’s Council, they’ll volunteer at outreach events, play in and coach unified sports games, and raise awareness for their grandmother’s cherished cause.
“It’s really about continuing her tradition,” Christina says of Eunice, whodied at the age of 88 in 2009.
For more on the Shriver cousins and their work to honor grandmother Eunice Kennedy Shriver, pick up the latest issue of PEOPLE, on newsstands Friday, or subscribehere.
The extended Shriver clan in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts, in 2019.

“I have an enormous sense of pride for her and for everything that she’s created, especially at the time that she did so,” says Molly, who notes that Eunice grew up in a family “that put a lot of attention on the men.”
Eunice Shriver teaching kids to swim during Camp Shriver’s early days in the 1960s.Courtesy Special Olympics, Inc.

Now the Shriver cousins are following in their grandmother’s footsteps as ambassadors for the organization.
The cousins got the best training possible, having spent summers with Eunice at the family’s homes in Maryland and Cape Cod.
“Immediately upon arriving, there were five different athletes who you’d jump in the pool with or play sports with — it became a way of life,” says Kathleen, a journalism grad student at Columbia University who develops social media campaigns with Special Olympics athletes.
Kathleen Shriver, Eunice Shriver and Tommy Shriver.

Tommy, a rising senior at Boston College, says the women in his family are “just as driven and passionate as my grandmother was.”
That comes out in the cousins' active summers at the Cape together.
“Everyone shows up to dinner exhausted like a noodle,” says Natasha, an NYU-educated singer-songwriter, “because we’ve done seven different sports in one day.”
Adds Timbo: “We try to keep up our grandmother’s competitive edge. We try to live that out in our family lives.”
Eunice Shriver (center), her husband Sargent Shriver (far right) and 16 of their 19 grandchildren celebrate her 85th birthday in 2006.

Still, the cousins acknowledge they have big shoes to fill.
“Growing up in a family where your last name is recognizable, there’s a lot of pressure to live up to that success, but the great thing about what we look up to is it’s human-driven,” says Molly, who has coached a Special Olympics Unified basketball team and is pursuing a career in criminal justice reform.
“It’s not to be the most wealthy person on Wall Street or the president,” she adds. “It’s to be the most respectable human being you can.”
To support the Special Olympics, go tojointherevolution.org, and to learn more about the organization, visitspecialolympics.org.
source: people.com