BEIJING: A puck zips around the rink so quickly that it’s hard to keep up. Wearing a full-body suit, Bahe Dana is ready to dive, slide, and jump back up into a ready stance at a moment’s notice.
At an outdoor rink in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, 8-year-old Bahe Dana is learning how to play ice hockey goalie. “I like this game because it’s cool to play and you can get to ice skate,” says Bahe, one of the first generation in China to grow up with ice hockey.
Winter sports in China was once considered a foreign and unaffordable pastime, but thanks to a drive initiated by President Xi Jinping, more are now taking to ice rinks and ski slopes.
On July 31, 2015, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) awarded the 2022 Winter Olympics to Beijing, making the Chinese capital the first city to host both the Summer and Winter Games.
Xi appeared on television hours before IOC members cast their votes to personally guarantee a “fantastic, extraordinary and excellent Olympic Winter Games.”
“The 2022 Olympic Winter Games, if held in China, will boost exchanges and mutual understanding between the Chinese and other civilizations of the world, encourage more than 1.3 billion Chinese to engage in winter sports with interest and passion, and give them yet another opportunity to help advance the Olympic movement and promote the Olympic spirit,” said Xi.
A long-time sports fan, Xi once pointed out that sport is an important way to improve people’s health and fulfill their aspirations for a better life.
That explains why he has pledged to get more than 300 million Chinese people on skis and skates, and why health has been incorporated into Beijing’s second Olympic journey.
To make skiing more accessible to the public, hundreds of new facilities are being built. Five years ago there were only 460 ski resorts in China, but by the end of 2019, that figure had jumped to 770, according to a white paper on China’s winter sports industry.
Some 2,000 primary and secondary schools across the nation had included winter sports in their curriculum by the end of 2020.
During Xi’s latest visit this month to Beijing’s Yanqing District, he underscored the 2022 Games’ role in developing China’s winter sports, especially snow sports, and expressed his hopes that hosting the Winter Olympics would contribute to China’s goal of becoming a global sporting power.
“With these 300 million people engaging in winter sports, we can clearly say the history of winter sports will be one before Beijing 2022 and one after the Winter Games in Beijing. –Agencies