I was sent a reminder today. It was a simple photograph from a friend’s back garden, of a young tree beginning to blossom. With it came a short message of gratitude and a little bit of childlike joy, seeing the buds just emerging.
The reminder: a young ornamental cherry tree in a West London garden. Photo credit: Louise Murray

The tree was an ornamental cherry donated to one of my own judo club families, to mark the passing of their grandad. It was planted in their back garden in Acton, West London, on World Judo Day 2019. Thousands of trees were planted all over the world, celebrating the birthday of Judo’s founder Jigoro Kano, with the theme ‘Plant a Tree.’

Mr Marius L. Vizer planted a tree in Abu Dhabi and a lot was spoken at the time about tolerance and friendship. Never have these ideals been more relevant.

Photo credit: Llyr Jones

The reminder brought me thoughts of Sakura festivals in Japan and Korea, with the traditional viewing of the cherry and plum blossoms, picnics in the Sun and time spent with family and friends. We can’t do that at the moment, but the trees are no less glorious. They still symbolise the cycle of life and in a small way, maybe even our Olympic cycles. This one is now longer than expected but it will still be beautiful. We will watch champions find their crowns, we will see the most profound disappointments and the most indescribable relief.

Sakura in Jinan, Korea, 2019

Our athletes are continuing with a very special commitment and discipline, ensuring their return to competition, to their planet full of friends, sees no lag and no dip, just excellence. There is mutual respect to be seen in every Instagram post. There are online challenges, an absolute adherence to our mutual welfare and an understanding that despite our vulnerabilities our will to climb is insatiable.

This is a unique time and humanity has never been so unified towards a single cause. This is the spirit of the Olympic movement in spades.

Every time you see blossom this spring, smile, they are for you!

Photo credit: Nicholas Messner
See also
Kata Paris 2025
Where Movement Becomes Memory

08. Nov. 2025 / Where Movement Becomes Memory

IBSA Judo
IBSA Judo Asian Championships, Day 2

08. Nov. 2025 / Day 2 in Astana was as explosive as expected, the heavyweights ...

Kata Paris 2025
A Three-Tier Vision for a Broader Judo Experience

08. Nov. 2025 / Ahead of the 2025 World Kata Championships in Paris, ...

Kata
Koshiki-no-kata: The Echo of Armour

08. Nov. 2025 / It is an historic first for the Koshiki-no-kata; for ...

History
The Man Who Opened the Way

08. Nov. 2025 / On 23rd October 1975, in Vienna, a young French judoka ...

Athlete Stories
Arthur Melo (BRA): Character Wins Over Adversity

08. Nov. 2025 / Natural disasters affect millions of us the world over ...

Veterans Paris 2025
A Glorious Finale for Women in Paris

07. Nov. 2025 / The final day of the Paris World Judo Championships ...

IBSA Judo
IBSA Judo Asian Championships Results, Day One

07. Nov. 2025 / Ippon judo was the name of the game on day one in Astana, ...

Veterans Paris 2025
Paris Shines as a Global Benchmark

07. Nov. 2025 / As the final medals were awarded and the last ippons ...

Islamic Games 2025
Judo at Riyadh 2025 Starts to Take Shape

07. Nov. 2025 / In the heart of Riyadh, the judo community witnessed ...

IBSA Judo
Judo Conversations Guide the Ethos in Astana

07. Nov. 2025 / Ahead of the IBSA Judo Asian Championships, 7th to ...

IBSA Judo
Warming Up is to Reunite With Safety

07. Nov. 2025 / Small challenges that our visually impaired judoka ...

Veterans Paris 2025
Dignity, Drive and a Shared Legacy

06. Nov. 2025 / The final men’s day at the Paris World Judo Championships ...

INTERVIEW EXPRESS
Shishime Ai (JPN)

08. Jun. 2018 / The next reigning world champion to be invited to answer ...

News
5 Key Takeaways from judo’s first Tokyo 2020 qualifier

06. Jun. 2018 / Highlights from Hohhot Grand Prix 2018

VIDEO
Judo for the World in Iran

07. Jun. 2018 / In April 2018, the International Judo Federation and ...

Meeting
JUDO: A Beneficial Cause

07. Jun. 2018 / 'Society should believe in sport as a beneficial cause ...