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‘I was born into temple life’: how Buddhist upbringing gives Olympic showjumper zen composure

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Eiken Sato riding Conthargo-Blue at the Olympic showjumping team qualifier
Eiken SATO riding Conthargo-Blue for JPN during the Team Jumping Qualifier of the Olympic Showjumping Team Competition at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games held on the Etoile Royal Esplanade in the grounds of the Palace of Versailles (Château de Versailles) in Versailles just outside Paris in France between the 25th July and 6th August 2024

Eiken Sato’s philosophical reaction to a “disappointing” first round in the Olympic showjumping may be in part thanks to his heritage. The Japanese showjumper was born into a centuries-old Buddhist temple compound, where his father, Shodo, was the chief priest. Both Shodo and Eiken’s older brother Kenki are Buddhist monks.

“I was born into temple life, but I’m the middle brother so I don’t have to be a monk,” says Eiken, 38. “I was free to go and ride horses! Maybe this background helps me to be calm, it’s possible.”

Olympic showjumping in the genes for Eiken Sato

But equestrianism is as much part of the Sato family’s heritage as Buddhism. In Ogawa, Nagano, the mountain village where Eiken was raised, his father set up a riding school.

“My father had a riding club, so I rode there from eight years old to 18,” he says. “Then I moved to Belgium, and now I’m in Germany.”

Kenki rode in the Japanese eventing team in the London 2012 Olympics and competed up to CCI5*, while Shodo was also selected for the Japanese team for the Moscow 1980 Games, but he did not get to compete as Japan joined the boycott. Eiken’s younger sister Tae also competes in international showjumping.

After Japan failed to qualify for the team final on Friday (2 August) at the Paris Olympics, Eiken is hoping for an improved performance in the individual competition which starts on Monday (5 August). He and Conthargo-Blue, whom he has been riding only since April, had four down in the qualifier.

“I am disappointed, but we are riding animals and we are also animals,” he says. “Most of all I feel sorry for my horse. I cannot change it by crying, so I try to put my head up and keep going.”

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