I was hoping to do this last weekend, but a plea for info from a certain reporter has thus far fell on deaf ears. One thing that has framed the entire concept of recovery for Rikuzen and nearby towns is that the area is over 2/3 65 years old and up, and was in a steady decline even before the disaster. And much of the heart of the city's youth fell in the tsunami- I just saw a report that when the harbor's tsunami gates failed to close, 45 young firemen gave their lives trying to shut them manually.
And the courage needed to live on is just as great. As the weather warmed, flies bred in the still-unremoved debris, nearly swamping the town again. Eradication measures by the government had soon cut the fly population by 90%, according to one resident, but it still had him catching 100 flies a night in three traps. The Japan Pest Control Assn. sent in a crew of 4,000 to assist. They decided to assess the size of the problems by setting traps at various locations in each city and checking them at 20-minute intervals. In Rikuzen's Osabe district, they were totalling 300 per count. Some other cities were registering as many as 2,800 catches, and the 20 garbage pickup sites in nearby Kamaishi were catching 22 lbs. of flies per week.
Another problem as the weather changed is that the bulk of clothes donated to relief agencies were winter items such as heavy coats- great when the quake hit in March, not so good now.
The age demographic there has also caused a crisis in care for the elderly. Many have relatives in various states of dementia, aggravated by the conditions. To care for them in the temporary homes most people who have homes live in is near-impossible; the government lifted capacity restrictions on care centers such as hospitals for the emergency, but many are worried over what they'll do when the government re-instates the regulations.
Heroes arise to try to bring life back to a semblance of normalcy. One is Akishi Sasaki, coach of Takata High School's baseball team. The school building is gone, the ball field a relief camp. The kids journey to Ofunato to learn in a once abandoned school; the players practice wherever, and play where they find open diamonds. In July, the team competed in the national tournament's first round. Many from the city followed them. Most of the boys had lost homes; none were killed, but a star pitcher had to move out of the area to live with relatives. A picture of him took his place on the bench as the team lost a lead and the game, 5-2. Afterwards, the man who'd held them together talked to them.On the grass outside the stadium, Mr. Sasaki, the coach, gathered his players. "Without a doubt, you guys will build the future of Takata," he told them. "You've experienced a lot. But you've come out stronger."
Another hero is Masaru Kumagai. Once the curator of the Sea and Shell Museum, he is now the de facto curator of the main municipal museum, which lost much of its collection and all of its staff in the wave (including his own mentor, Masahiko Sato). Bit by bit the trained archaeologist has led his volunteers in recovering items from the muck and debris, including a set of 1,200 year old sword blades.
Also among the finds are the Yoshida diaries, documents from the shogunate period dating back hundreds of years and severely damaged by the water. He realizes that rebuilding the museum will cost millions of Yen and is probably out of reach. But Kumagai was "raised by the museum," and lives it every day.
Yet another is 66 year old Mitsuaki Kinno. A volunteer, he runs the public bathhouse that has become an essential public meeting place. At its height when everyone was homeless, the baths (known as Fukko no Yu, or "a bath for recovery") served 300 people a day; now that there are some with at least temporary housing it runs about 1/3 of that. Still, it is so popular- and necessary from a societal perspective- that a planned shut down date of late July was cancelled. While Kinno doesn't know how much longer he'll be able to do the exhausting job, he has no intention to give up while it- and he- is needed.
Hope, though, goes on. The Singapore Red Cross announced in a report dated today that they had raised S$ 34.4 million ($28.2 million USD), of which S$11 million (just over 9 mill American) will go to building a hall/evacuee center in Rikuzen. But the real battle is if the young people like coach Sasaki's team will actually stay to do the job, or if the exodus from the aging northeast of Japan will accelerate.
Much like the heroic efforts to save that one remaining tree, it remains to be seen if even heroic efforts can succeed. For the tree, we might know as soon as next spring if any of the desperate measures tried will end up saving the tree. For the city itself, the results are going to be much more long term.
Showing posts with label tsunami. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tsunami. Show all posts
Friday, August 5, 2011
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Rikuzen Takata update
I've been combing the reports for info on the Town I decided to feature in the Japan tragedy, Rikuzen-Takata. One report said that only 5,900 of a population of over 23,000 had managed to find shelter before the tsunami hit. Police said Saturday morning that they had dug up 300-400 bodies already from the debris. Rikuzen-Takata, described by the Daily Yomiyuri online as one of six nearby communities whose "administrative functions are paralyzed" (no surprise since the wave reached to the third floor of the city hall), was flown over Saturday morning by Yomiyuri reporter Koji Yasuda, who gave this report:
" The next town south was Rikuzen-Takata, but almost no buildings were to be seen where the town should have been located. It seemed as if the port town had suddenly vanished. What I could see there were only medium-rise buildings believed to be made of reinforced concrete, such as a hospital."
Reading about it only gives a vague idea. Here's video from the town.
In the meantime I found this report, orignally in German, on the fate of the Asia League and the Anyang Halla team.
Asia earthquake prevented League final
Saturday 12 March 2011, 18:32
- Martin Merk
The severe earthquake in Japan left over 1000 dead and hockey not spared. The final series of the Asian league, which would have to start yesterday, was canceled until further notice. The two teams had this blessing in disguise, because they were both on the hard-hit east coast in Fukushima Prefecture. The home team, the Tohoku Free Blades trained in its ice rink in Koriyama, Japan when the earthquake struck. The players immediately rushed from the ice to shake as the earth and pieces of concrete started falling off. The crew spent the night in an office building because their hotel was damaged.
Even the visiting team, the defending champion Anyang Halla in South Korea, had a blessing in disguise. It was only just landed in Sendai and on the way to Koriyama, when the earthquake began. The team is now in Fukushima, and only a short time before there was an explosion at a nuclear power plant took place, took off and returned to South Korea. When the playoffs will continue is as yet unclear and especially for the Japanese probably currently not in the foreground.
Sounds like the Korean team dodged several bullets. I'll keep checking the updates on this, but let me go around to the league's Japanese cities and see how they fared.
Nikko (home of the Ice Bucks)- found nothing. No news is good news, eh?
Kushiro (home of the Nippon Paper Cranes)- in the north of Hokkaido, away from the damage.
Tomokomai(home of the Oji Eagles)- on the south shore of Hokkaido, some minimal damage to docks.
Hachinhoe (one of two home bases for the Tohoku Free Blades)- whole areas flooded, lots of ships washed ashore, including a fishing boat thought lost in the wave, from which 81 survivors were choppered out.
Koriyama (their other home)- plenty of damage, but standing enough that the FoxNews stringers moved there when the radiation evacs began.
That's the news for now. I'll keep following news from Rikuzen-Takata for a while.
" The next town south was Rikuzen-Takata, but almost no buildings were to be seen where the town should have been located. It seemed as if the port town had suddenly vanished. What I could see there were only medium-rise buildings believed to be made of reinforced concrete, such as a hospital."
Reading about it only gives a vague idea. Here's video from the town.
In the meantime I found this report, orignally in German, on the fate of the Asia League and the Anyang Halla team.
Asia earthquake prevented League final
Saturday 12 March 2011, 18:32
- Martin Merk
The severe earthquake in Japan left over 1000 dead and hockey not spared. The final series of the Asian league, which would have to start yesterday, was canceled until further notice. The two teams had this blessing in disguise, because they were both on the hard-hit east coast in Fukushima Prefecture. The home team, the Tohoku Free Blades trained in its ice rink in Koriyama, Japan when the earthquake struck. The players immediately rushed from the ice to shake as the earth and pieces of concrete started falling off. The crew spent the night in an office building because their hotel was damaged.
Even the visiting team, the defending champion Anyang Halla in South Korea, had a blessing in disguise. It was only just landed in Sendai and on the way to Koriyama, when the earthquake began. The team is now in Fukushima, and only a short time before there was an explosion at a nuclear power plant took place, took off and returned to South Korea. When the playoffs will continue is as yet unclear and especially for the Japanese probably currently not in the foreground.
Sounds like the Korean team dodged several bullets. I'll keep checking the updates on this, but let me go around to the league's Japanese cities and see how they fared.
Nikko (home of the Ice Bucks)- found nothing. No news is good news, eh?
Kushiro (home of the Nippon Paper Cranes)- in the north of Hokkaido, away from the damage.
Tomokomai(home of the Oji Eagles)- on the south shore of Hokkaido, some minimal damage to docks.
Hachinhoe (one of two home bases for the Tohoku Free Blades)- whole areas flooded, lots of ships washed ashore, including a fishing boat thought lost in the wave, from which 81 survivors were choppered out.
Koriyama (their other home)- plenty of damage, but standing enough that the FoxNews stringers moved there when the radiation evacs began.
That's the news for now. I'll keep following news from Rikuzen-Takata for a while.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)

