Japan has unveiled a beautiful Olympic torch for the 2020 Games which will be held in Tokyo. The rose-gold-coloured aluminium torch was modelled after Japan’s national flower, the sakura (cherry blossom), just ahead of cherry blossom season, which is currently underway.
When viewed from above, the beacon is made up of five hollow, open chambers that represent the petals and surround the ‘stigma’ in the centre. Each petal will have its own flame, and these will unite to form one bright, large flame in the middle.
The torch, which is 71cm long and weighs 1.2kg, was designed by artist Tokujin Yoshioka and constructed using aluminium recycled from the temporary housing that was built to house victims after the 2011 earthquake and tsunami. The natural disaster killed about 18,000 people and the Fukushima nuclear plant was affected, leading to the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl.
‘Cherry blossoms drawn by kids in the disaster-hit area (in Fukushima)… inspired me,’ Yoshioka told reporters.
The passing of the flame will begin on 26 March 2020, and the torch will leave the starting point in Fukushima and be carried south to the island of Okinawa (which was the starting point for the 1964 Tokyo Games) before it will return north to Tokyo on 10 July.
The #Tokyo2020 Paralympic Torch has been unveiled! The #sakura pink torch will be lit for the first time in Tokyo in August 2020, embodying the “Share Your Light” concept of the #TorchRelay and leveraging the enthusiasm of all those supporting the Paralympics. #ParalympicFlame pic.twitter.com/z0hracw2mY
— #Tokyo2020 (@Tokyo2020) March 25, 2019
Just in time for this year’s bloom, the iconic cherry blossom — “sakura-mon” in Japanese — serves as the inspiration for the design of the torch that will light the cauldron at @Tokyo2020.https://t.co/aDP0OX7Rmc | #Tokyo2020Tuesday pic.twitter.com/LXmTr3Gi53
— Team USA (@TeamUSA) March 26, 2019
Featured image: Kyodo News via Getty Images