The long-awaited Tokyo Olympic Summer Games begins on July 23rd with the Opening Ceremonies. The Summer Olympics is a great time you get your children excited about sports, physical exercise, and friendly competition. Here’s how.
Japanese Olympic Committee President Yamashita Yasuhiro put it well: “With sporting events now slowly returning to the stage, we are reminded again of the ability of sport to bring hope and the power of athletes to inspire courage.” He’s right, of course. And that’s why the world awaits the only event that can be possibly known by way of these two words: The Games.
The Games will be held in more than 40 venues, the majority in and around Tokyo, with some events for soccer, baseball, and softball further afield. In the capital, the venues are in two areas the Heritage Zone, which makes use of infrastructure from the city’s 1964 Games, and, closer to the water, the newly developed Tokyo Bay Zone.
The 2020 Games will see the introduction of new competitions, including 3×3 basketball, freestyle BMX, and madison cycling, and further mixed events. Under new IOC policies, which allow the host organizing committee to add new sports to the Olympic program to augment the permanent core events, these Games will see karate, sport climbing, surfing, and skateboarding make their Olympic debuts, as well as the return of baseball and softball for the first time since 2008.
Here are some important facts about the Tokyo Olympic Summer Games:
–Tokyo is the host city for the Olympics for the second time – after 1964.
–The motto of the 2020 Olympic Summer Games in Japan is ‘Discover Tomorrow.’
–The torch relay began in Fukushima on March 25th. The motto of the torch relay is “Hope Lights Our Way.”
–The 2020 Olympic torch relay takes place over 121 days. The relay has moved through all 47 prefectures of Japan. The torch relay is meant to showcase the cultural and scenic attractions of the country.
–The Olympic Games in 2021 will be held from Friday, July 23rd to Sunday, August 8.
–In the Tokyo Games, more than 11,000 participants are expected to compete in 339 sporting events.
–The various events of the Olympics will be held in 42 venues all over the country.
–The opening ceremony of the Tokyo Games will be held on Friday, July 23rd, in the new national stadium in Tokyo.
–The logo of the Tokyo Olympics depicts a circle in a checkered pattern in traditional Japanese indigo blue. The pattern consists of three different varieties of rectangular shapes which symbolize “different countries, cultures, and ways of thinking” with the message of unity in diversity.
–The Tokyo Olympics will focus on innovation and new initiatives such as field support robots in the games. Mascot-type robots will greet athletes and visitors at the Olympic Games venues.
–For the first time, these robots, including humanoid robots, will be used at the Olympic events. Humanoid robots will give people who cannot attend the Games the chance to virtually attend the events when they interact with these robots.
–The official mascot of the Tokyo Olympic Summer Games is Miraitowa, a cheerful character that can teleport. The name comes from the Japanese words ‘mirai’ (meaning ‘future’ in English) and ‘towa‘ (which means ‘eternity’ in English). The term refers to the wish that “everlasting hope will carry on in the hearts of everyone around the world.”
–The Olympic motto is Citius – Altius – Fortius which is from the Latin language and means ‘Faster – Higher – Stronger.’
Note, too, that there are websites designed to get children interested and involved in The Games. It’s a great opportunity to learn about Japan and its culture!
https://olympics.com/tokyo-2020/en/games/event-kids-supporters/
https://activeforlife.com/8-summer-olympics-sports-games/
https://kids.kiddle.co/2020_Summer_Olympics
https://kids.nationalgeographic.com/history/article/first-olympics
YouTube has some great videos to orient your family to Tokyo Games.
This video features NBC’s brief introduction to the Olympics: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ENMhrEVa4XQ
This video features the venues of the Tokyo Olympics: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IptQWWCxs2s
This video features the Tokyo Olympics mascots: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ixE1a6_l7e4&t=42s
Enjoy The Games!