Olympic volunteers lend helping hand


Chinese volunteer at Olympics urges others to acquire skills in foreign languages, Zhou Jin reports.
When sweat-soaked athletes were competing for medals and shattering records in the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics in July and August, volunteers clad in blue polo shirts emblazoned with the Olympics logo were stationed at every corner in and outside the venues to facilitate the smooth operation of the Games.
Among them was Chinese volunteer Hou Jiayi, who lives in the town of Nasu in northeastern Japan.
She said the work gave her a different perspective to view the gigantic sporting event, giving her a sense of accomplishment after lending a helping hand and allowing her to meet friends from various cultural backgrounds.
This was the third Olympics for Hou, who worked as a volunteer translator for media at the Sochi Winter Olympics in 2014 and the Rio Summer Olympics in 2016.
"Serving at the Olympics frees me from daily life, and I am able to immerse myself in a completely different culture for a while," Hou said.
The seasoned volunteer witnessed an orderly and well-organized Sochi Games while experiencing a relaxed atmosphere at the Rio Games, which she described as a "colorful world".
And at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, which Hou said she was destined to join as she is familiar with the country and she could give full play to her language skills-she speaks fluently in Chinese, Japanese and English.
Shortly after she went to Japan and started to work for a German company in Nasu three years ago, Hou applied for the volunteer position and went through a series of interviews and tests and joined more than 70,000 registered volunteers for the Games.
The 28-year-old was responsible for recording technical data at the Ariake Tennis Park during her ten-day volunteering service. The results could predict the outcome of a tennis match. It was a position that combined her enthusiasm for tennis with her engineering background.
"Recording world-class games from such close quarters is different from watching them on TV. The athletes are incredible."
After volunteering for eight tennis matches at the Paralympics, Hou said her impression of Paralympians changed.
When recording a women's doubles match in the wheelchair tennis competition, she was astonished by the speed and power of a Chinese player, who she said struck balls as fast as athletes without disabilities.
"I felt like her wheelchair was flying," Hou added.
She was already enlightened by the volunteers' training before the 2020 Olympics, which taught volunteers how to change stereotypical outlook on athletes with disabilities and contact and communicate with them with a sense of equality and respect.
"We are just different, but equal, so sympathy is unnecessary."
Three months before her volunteering service, she was a torchbearer for the 2020 Olympic Torch Relay, the only foreigner selected for the service in Nasu region.
As a torchbearer, Hou said she wanted to show the charm of Nasu, a ski getaway and home to the region's hot springs, to the outside world from the perspective of a foreigner, and to serve as a bridge connecting people from Nasu with visitors from around the world.
"The Olympic Games not only promote sports exchanges but also the interaction of different cultures, and while introducing the host country to the world, local people can also better understand the outside world."
- Zebrafish, grain experiments answer cosmic questions
- Space station providing unique environment for research firsts
- More Chinese embrace making wills earlier in life
- China launches new data relay satellite
- Online column dedicated to protecting Taiwan compatriots
- China's State Council appoints, removes officials