The mascots for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games were named during a ceremony in the Japanese capital yesterday.
The Olympic mascot, a blue-checked pointy-eared figure, was named as Miraitowa – combining the Japanese words ‘mirai’, meaning future, and ‘towa’, which means eternity.
The Paralympic counterpart, who is pink-checked and wears a cape, was named Someity after a variety of cherry blossom called Soeiyoshino.
Games organisers also said the name sounded similar to “so mighty” in English.
The mascots were revealed in February but remained unnamed until Sunday.
They were designed by illustrator Ryo Taniguchi, who won a nationwide competition that was determined by Japanese children, with his entries clinching more than half the
total votes.
Tokyo 2020 president and former Japanese prime minister Yoshiro Mori was present at the unveiling and delivered a message of inclusion.
“You are part of the Olympics as well,” Mori told the assembled children.
“You chose these two characters. We had roughly five million students who chose these so
the Olympics belongs to everyone, not just the athletes,
everyone.
“We are hoping everyone will unite as one and we hope to achieve a great success and to do so we will need everyone’s co-operation.”
In a country that has a fondness for mascots, Tokyo 2020 organisers sought to create lovable characters for the Games with both selections said to have superpowers and an ability to teleport between the digital world and reality.
After the ceremony, the mascots reappeared on a boat that cruised down the Sumida river, waving to children on the riverbank as they passed some
of Tokyo’s most iconic
landmarks.
President of the Tokyo 2020 Organising Committee Yoshiro Mori and Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike pose with Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games mascot Miraitowa and Paralympic mascot Someity in Tokyo yesterday. (Reuters)