The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Osaka lights flame as Games open

-

TOKYO — Japan's global superstar Naomi Osaka on Friday lit the Olympic cauldron to mark the start of Tokyo 2020, in an opening ceremony shorn of glitz and overshadow­ed by a pandemic but defined by hope, tradition and gestures of diversity.

Postponed by a year due to the coronaviru­s, the Games are being held without spectators in a city under a COVIDinduc­ed state of emergency, as many other parts of the globe also still struggle with a resurgence of cases.

Athletes, the vast majority wearing masks, paraded through an eerily silent National Stadium where flagbearer­s for the first time were both men and women and the Canadian delegation marched with rainbow badges on their uniforms in support of the LGBTQ+ community.

In its journey through the stadium, the torch was passed from Olympic champions to baseball legends — one born in Taiwan — a doctor and a nurse, a Paralympia­n, and children from parts of Japan hit badly by the earthquake and tsunami of March 2011.

It was finally handed to Osaka, the 23-year-old fourtime tennis grand slam champion whose background as the daughter of a Haitian man and Japanese woman reflects the changes and slowly growing diversity coming to a once ethnically homogeneou­s country.

"Undoubtedl­y the greatest athletic achievemen­t and honor I will ever have in my life," Osaka wrote in a tweet. "I have no words to describe the feelings I have right now but I do know I am currently filled with gratefulne­ss and thankfulne­ss."

Thomas Bach, the president of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, said in his opening speech addressing the athletes: "The lesson we learned is we need more solidarity — more solidarity among societies, and solidarity within societies."

But the shift towards greater inclusiven­ess has not come without stumbles. Tokyo 2020 has been hit by a string of scandals, including the exit of senior officials over derogatory comments about women, Holocaust jokes and bullying.

Normally a star-studded display teeming with celebritie­s, the ceremony was lowkey, with fewer than 1,000 people in attendance, strict social distancing rules and signs calling on spectators to "be quiet around the venue."

Opening with videos showing empty streets around the world and an athlete training alone in darkness, it also included drones hovering over Tokyo's National Stadium in the shape of the Olympic logo morphing into planet earth and a global performanc­e via videolink of John Lennon and Yoko Ono's "Imagine".

"With the world in a tough situation because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, I would like to pay my respect and express my gratitude to medical workers and all those who are working hard every day to overcome the difficulti­es," said local organizing committee President Seiko Hashimoto.

The ceremony climaxed with a fusion of traditiona­l kabuki theatre — with its elaborate makeup and costumes — and a jazz piano improvisat­ion, on a stage topped with the cauldron for the Olympic flame.

At the parade, most countries were represente­d by both male and female flagbearer­s in an Olympic first, but not everybody stuck to pandemic protocols. In an awkward contrast to most other athletes, teams from Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan and Pakistan's flagbearer­s paraded https:// www.reuters.com/lifestyle/ sports/maskless-kyrgyzstan­rain-olympic-openingpar­ade-other-teams-coverfaces-2021-07-23 maskless.

ECHOES OF ‘64

The opening also featured fireworks in indigo and white, the colours of the Tokyo 2020 emblem, and gave a nod to

Japanese tradition represente­d by giant wooden Olympic rings linked to the 1964 Games, which the city also hosted.

Some delegation­s enlivened the mood. Uganda, wearing bright traditiona­l costumes, did a few measures of a dance, while Argentine athletes jumped up and down on entering.

A moment of silence was held "for all those family and friends we have lost," especially to COVID-19. The Israeli athletes slain at the 1972 Munich Games were also remembered.

Japanese Emperor Naruhito and Bach, both masked, cheered on the athletes after bowing to each other before sitting down.

"Today is a moment of hope. Yes, it is very different from what all of us imagined. But finally we are all here together," said Bach.

Unlike his grandfathe­r who opened the 1964 Games with a Japanese word that means "congratula­tions," Naruhito opted for a more neutral word in Japanese that is closer to "commemorat­e."

The ceremony was marked by major absences, including former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who wooed the Games to Tokyo. Top sponsors also stayed away, highlighti­ng strong opposition to the event within Covid-fatigued Japan.

 ?? PHIL NOBLE • REUTERS ?? Canadian flagbearer­s Nathan Hirayama and Miranda Ayim ceremonies on Friday night in Tokyo. lead their contingent in the athletes parade during the opening
PHIL NOBLE • REUTERS Canadian flagbearer­s Nathan Hirayama and Miranda Ayim ceremonies on Friday night in Tokyo. lead their contingent in the athletes parade during the opening

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada