Archived entries for Japan

Japan tsunami eyewitness stories #4

Having lost almost everything, the strangest experience for the two sisters Ryoko and Kaori, is to walk in the remains of their house – wearing shoes inside what used to be their living room.

In the gym hall, Ryoko is racing across the floor. She sees nothing, except the springboard in front of her. 1, 2, 3, her feet are synced in perfect rhythm, setting off and being catapulted into the air. She’s weightlessly flying, in a long split second. But as she makes a perfect landing on both feet, the ground is giving away under her. Everything is shaking and squeaking. Something is wrong. The tremors become stronger and stronger. Ryoko knows it’s an earthquake. She has experienced it many times before, but never this strong. She can’t get up and run, as it continues to shake.

Kaori, 9, and her sister Ryoko, 12, Ishinomaki, Japan.

The girls around her are screaming and crying. Ryoko tries to crawl to the others, helping to get everyone to sit together and hold on to each other. The ground is rocking under them in what feels like an eternity. And then, finally, it stops. The following silence is deafening, as if they’re all holding their breath thinking “Is it really over?”, without really daring to believe it.
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Japan tsunami eyewitness stories #3

The twins Hiroki and Miho are caught inside their school. A gigantic earthquake has hit, and a tsunami floods the town right before their eyes.

It’s late afternoon and school is about to finish for today. Hiroki’s thoughts escape out the window of the classroom. The rest of the art-class is busy drawing and painting. A ray of sun hits him and warms his body in the midst of a cold winter. He looks forward to going home. Suddenly everything starts to shake. At first just a little, but then harder and harder. The tables are dancing, and the windows are rattling, pictures are falling down from the walls. Hiroki is torn out of his daydreaming; an earthquake is hitting! The building is cracking and everybody is screaming. It’s the biggest earthquake Hiroki and his classmates have ever experienced, and it goes on and on. The earth is shaking so much, nobody is able to move. Under his desk Hiroki is hanging on to the leg of the desk.

Twins Hiroki and Miho, 10 years old. Fifth graders in Ishinomaki, Japan

When at last it’s quiet, the whole class runs to the teacher. Together they get down the main stairs and out into the school yard. Hiroki calls for his sister Miho. They are twins but are not in the same class. There is snow in the air, and Hiroki is cold while he is calling and looking for Miho. All the children press close together to keep warm, many of them left their jackets behind in the rush to get out.
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Rebuilding a nation

The Japanese government recently updated its estimated cost of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami to 16,9 billion Yen (210 million US$).

As the worlds third largest economy Japan has a significant capacity to manage and respond to emergencies. Moreover, in the aftermath of the disaster, working alongside officials agencies, the Japanese people responded actively to their countrymen in need, not only opening up their houses for affected people, but also mobilizing an army of volunteers. In April, more than 11,000 people from all over the country were actively clearing and cleaning the streets and houses in the affected areas. Street by street, house by house, mud and debris were meticulously scraped away and carried to the streets, where trucks in never ending lines would transport everything to temporary landfills outside towns. An estimated 125,000 buildings were damaged or completely destroyed and the region was covered with an estimated 25 million tons of rubble.

As the city of Ishinomaki is cleared of rubble, a new challenge arises in what to do with the remains. Numerous landfills have opened up on government owned landed, on the outskirts of Ishinomaki. This elderly lady is desperate to get her voice heard in the city council, as her house is becoming uninhabitable with the landfill growing daily and the smell being indescribable.


The landfill is endless, but meticulously sorted in different types of trash.


More than 50 teams of volunteers take the streets of this one town everyday, clearing rubble, scraping out mud. This team consisted mostly of university students from Tokyo.


A volunteer has found wedding photos in the mud, he carefully brushes them off and puts them aside. Some of the findings from the streets are taken to evacuation centers, for the chance to reunite survivors with memories of loved ones.

 

Japan Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami 2011

As the March 11, magnitude 9.0, earthquake shook the Japanese people to its core, a deep sea diver working in the water as the quake hit, recalls the experience: “The seafloor was snapping, twisting and turning like a fish pulled out of the water. It was roaring and groaning with such an intense and frightening noise, torturing every fibre of my body.”

In the 30 minutes that passed between the ground stopped moving, and the first tsunami waves hit the coast, the diver reached land and fled for higher ground. Beneath him his life as a fisherman was swept away, along with his village. As the waves spread, hitting further and further down the coast, the story of destruction repeated itself in one coastal city after another, making this the worst natural disaster in the history of Japan.

As the water withdrew, and in the following months, the japanese people found themselves left behind with more than 15,000 confirmed deaths and almost 8,000  missing. 300,000 people were left with no home and evacuation centers opened in all the affected areas. As of mid May more than 115,000 were still living in these centers, as refugees in their own country, awaiting temporary housing. Suicide rates were soaring, as people lost hope in getting their lives back on track.

Japan, a country resting on four tectonic plates, is no foreign land to earthquakes and tsunamis. Shakings of the ground is an almost daily event and everybody is educated from childhood in how to handle these situations. Had it only been for the quake, not much damage would have occurred. However, no risk calculation had taken into account a mass of water on this scale.

Ranging in height from a few meters up to 38 meters, the tsunami wave was unstoppable in its deadly path. Seawalls were washed away like plastic toys on a summer beach. Houses were lifted, in a clean cut from their foundation, and carried away by the water. Entire towns were wiped away, leaving nothing behind, as building regulations were based on smaller tsunami heights, leaving many people to believe they were safe.

Ishinomaki Bay, looking south over the sea. The face of the ocean is calm, as if today was no different than yesterday. Behind, the city of Ishinomaki is recovering from the impact with the tsunami waves that rushed passed here, directly towards the city center.



Oshika peninsula, a village is completely wiped out as the tsunami wave was forced into the narrow bay, making the wave higher. This is one out of many villages like it along the coast of the peninsula.


Ishinomaki. Officials from Japan Air Self Defense forces overlooking the towncenter. The damage is very localized, varying within a few hundred meters from complete destruction, over extensive water damage to no damage at all.


A long stretch of flat land, just on the coastline is left with few houses standing and completely covered in rubble.


A man biking through the rubble. Many still return to their neighborhoods searching for belongings, and memories of their loved ones, lost in the water.


A classroom converted into temporary housing for several families, with no privacy or timeframe for when they will have a home again.


Police forces from all over the country are searching the rubble  for bodies, in an increasing smell of decay.


A soldier is passing by a damaged house, its first floor resting on other rubble, a doorframe and two wooden beams.


Ishinomaki Paper Mill, a huge paper factory and employer to 822 people, now in complete closedown as the factory itself and surrounding areas were shattered by the tsunami wave. Cargo trains and containers have been tumbled around as weightless objects. 2 people lost their lives in the factory when the tsunami hit, and 3 remain unaccounted for.


The village of Hashiura, 600 meters inland, behind big protective dikes, the water still flooded this village with about 1 meter of water.


A cemetery in Ishinomaki, Japan, April 2011. Cars have been stopped by the foot of a mountain, leaving them spread among the graves as the water receded.

 

A tower of a temple remains, as an island in a massive sea of rubble.


A community pool surrounded by a thick layer of mud and flooded with black water, cars and rubble.


A Statue Of Liberty copy stretches her torch towards a dark sky, she remains as one of the few standing structures on this island in the river that cuts through Ishinomaki.

To explore more stories from the Japan earthquake and tsunami disaster, please check the Japan disaster category

Japan tsunami eyewitness stories #2

The second story in my ongoing miniseries on eyewitness stories from survivors of the earthquake and tsunami, Japan 2011. These are the stories normally used as part of my background research, but deserving so much more, they are now being put together here. Read the first story and more about the series here or carry on reading the second story below.

“Every time I think about this story it leaves me speechless. It’s almost unreal how our human paths can cross each other in ways that seem impossible, but still as if they were meant to be.

I have a neighbor and dear friend who was the ex-wife of a monk, and despite their separation, they had remained in very good terms and close contact. Her ex-husband lived in his temple in another city and she was here, next to my house.
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Back to school

April 21, Ishinomaki, Japan. It’s the first day of school after the earthquake and tsunami disaster on March 11. For weeks and weeks the children have been scattered, many living in evacuation centers, and schools have been closed. On this day the sun is bright and the atmosphere is euphoric, as the children pass a major milestone in returning to normal life.

Many schools were used as evacuation centers. Today, the children are running up and down the stairs, getting books, tables and tools back in the classrooms, transforming the building from an evacuation center back to being a school again.

 

Extra attention is given to the first graders, ensuring everything is as normal as it can be fulfilling the expectations and excitement for the first day of school.

 

With more than 20,000 people dead or missing, not all classes are full. Many students are faced with empty seats and friends that are no longer there.

 

In spite of everything that has happened over the last month and half, lives turned upside down and much of the world around the children having collapsed, the joy and happiness to move on and to be together again holds a promise of a much brighter future.

Lost love

Ishinomaki, Japan. More than 300,000 people became refugees in their own country, as Japan was hit by the worst natural disaster in the history of the country. Hundreds of evacuation centers were opened, in schools and other public buildings, providing shelter for the people whose home had been swept away by the tsunami wave.

In a pile of orphaned photos and notes found in the mud and debris, a newlywed couple stares into a future turned upside down. Their frame and glass still covered in dry mud from a disaster hitting like a lightning from the sky.

Japan tsunami eyewitness stories #1

Eyewitness stories are one of my greatest resources to help shape and direct my work in the field. I’m incredibly thankful to the people sharing their story, providing me valuable angles and background information about an event. Sometimes however the stories themselves are so strong that they deserve more than being background material.

This was the case during my time in Japan, covering the aftermath of the earthquake and tsunami. A number of people I spoke to had stories that left me absolutely speechless, and I knew I wanted to put them together to this miniseries of eyewitness stories.

These are stories by everyday Japanese people, old and young, seeing the world around them being literally washed away, and a regular Friday afternoon turning into a fight for their lives.

Some requested anonymity, and through that also inspired the name for this series.
These are the stories you will see as you look closely “In Our Eyes”.

“I was on the highway when the earthquake hit. It was so strong that I decided to turn back towards my home. I had the radio on, and reports of the tsunami waves started coming in. Since they were only talking about cities higher north, I assumed everything would be safe.

Thinking back now, retracing my route – I was heading straight into the tsunami.
Read the full story…



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