![]() “I started a Twitter feed on her because it’s quite amazing that at 118 she drinks Coca-Cola herself and plays Othello,” Junko Tanaka said. She tweets photos of her great-grandmother enjoying treats such as cake and soda pop, and shares her achievements and the exchanges she has with her relatives. Tanaka’s great-granddaughter Junko Tanaka set up a Twitter account in January 2020 to celebrate the supercentenarian’s life. Torchbearers will be required to fill out a daily health checklist two weeks before the relay and refrain from activities that may involve a risk of infection, such as eating out or going to crowded places, officials advised. Spectators have also been told to “support with applause … rather than by shouting or cheering.” The relay will be streamed live online. Tokyo 2020 torch relay to begin March 25 with infection measures in place Those who wish to view the relay from the roadside must wear masks, stay home if they feel unwell, and refrain from traveling outside the prefecture they live in. The coronavirus restrictions include avoiding “the 3 Cs” – closed spaces, crowded places, and close-contact settings. The torch will first go through regions affected by the devastating 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, marking the disaster’s 10th anniversary, before traveling “around every corner of Japan,” officials said. The pandemic-delayed Tokyo 2020 Olympic Torch Relay starts in Fukushima prefecture on March 25, with several Covid-19 countermeasures in place, officials announced last month. ![]() “She has always loved festivals,” Eiji Tanaka said.īut he warned her participation in May – which is sponsored by a Japanese life insurance company – will depend on her health and weather conditions. Tanaka’s family said she hasn’t been doing any training for the torch relay, but is excited to be a part of the Olympics. “(Kane) said she wants to break that record,” said Eiji Tanaka, her grandson. In 2019, the Guinness Book of World Records certified Tanaka as the world’s oldest living person, and now she has her sights on another milestone – the record for the oldest person to ever live is held by a French woman, who died age 122. In Japan, women have a life expectancy of 87.45 years compared to 81.4 for men, government figures released in July 2020 showed. In 2020, one in every 1,565 people in Japan was over 100 years old – more than 88% of them women. Tanaka is by no means Japan’s only centenarian.įor the first time last year, Japan recorded more than 80,000 centenarians, according to the country’s Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry – marking the 50th consecutive annual increase. Kane Tanaka, age 32 in 1935, is pictured in the center of the front row. Tanaka’s family, who have not been able to visit her for 18 months during the Covid-19 pandemic, said staying curious and doing math are her secrets to keeping the mind sharp and body healthy. and enjoys playing the strategic board game, Othello. Tanaka now lives in a nursing home, where she usually wakes at 6 a.m. ![]() When counting both the summer and winter editions of the games, this year’s Olympics will be the 49th of her lifetime. When the Olympics were last held in Tokyo in 1964, Tanaka was 61 years old. She lived through two world wars and the 1918 Spanish flu, although her grandson Eiji said: “I don’t remember her talking much about the past … She’s very forward thinking – she really enjoys living in the present.”Īnd she is almost as old as the modern Olympic Games, which began in 1896. She has five grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. She went on to have four children with the rice shop owner she married at 19 years old, and worked in the family store until she was 103. Tanaka was born in 1903 – the year aviation pioneers Orville and Wilbur Wright made history by completing the world’s first powered flight. Previous record holders for the oldest Olympic torchbearers include Aida Gemanque of Brazil, who lit the torch at the 2016 Rio Summer Games age 106, and table tennis player Alexander Kaptarenko, who ran with the torch at the 2014 Sochi Winter Games at 101 years old. “It’s great she reached that age and she can still keep up an active lifestyle – we want other people to see that and feel inspired, and not to think age is a barrier,” said her grandson Eiji Tanaka, who is in his 60s. Kane Tanaka loves fizzy drinks and plays maths games every day.
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