Tag Archives: Caritas Japan

Caritas Japan says thank you two years after quake

By Bishop Tarcisio Isao Kikuchi, SVD, President of Caritas Japan

Caritas Japan wants to sincerely thank our brothers and sisters throughout the world for the tremendous support you have given to our Great East Japan Earthquake relief activities. We will never forget that when Japan suffered that unprecedented disaster, friends like you reached out to help.

Nearly two years have passed since the earthquake on 11 March, 2011. Unfortunately, many people who were affected by the disaster have yet to find peace and hope. Instead, they worry that the harsh reality is that with the passage of time their suffering is being forgotten both in Japan and elsewhere.

In this situation, Caritas Japan continues to unite with those who have been affected by the disaster, listening to their voices and walking with them as they strive to survive and recover.

Caritas Japan continues to search out and aid those whose needs are not being met by government services. In particular, this effort is carried on through the various volunteer bases in the affected area that have been set up by the Catholic Church in Japan, centered on the Sendai Diocese.

The reconstruction of Iwate and Miyagi Prefectures will take a long time. Even more time will be needed for Fukushima to recover from the effects of the nuclear power plant accident caused by the tsunami. Therefore, Caritas Japan, in collaboration with the Sendai Diocese, is committed to   taking a long-term perspective toward its activities.

We want to thank you for your warm support in the past and hope that we can continue to rely upon your generosity in the future.

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Small businesses back to work in Japan after quake

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By Laura Sheahen in Kesennumma

If you’d worked all your life to build up a business, only to see it swept away in minutes by a gargantuan wave, you’d be forgiven for wanting to give up. The aging residents of Japan’s east coast lost decades of labour when a tsunami struck in March 2011.

“There were many shopkeepers who thought about quitting,” says Masato Sakamoto, who lives in a coastal city called Kesennumma. The city wasn’t just swallowed by water, it was burned by massive fires that the disaster sparked.

In the town centre, the streets are silent. Debris dangles crazily from burned-out rafters. But where others see a ghost town, Masato sees possibilities. Standing in an empty lot, he describes his plans for a two-story shopping plaza that will house dozens of small shops here.

In poor countries, Caritas helps people help themselves by providing basic income-earning items like sewing machines or fishing nets. In an industrialized country like Japan, helping small businesses takes different forms. One is filling in the gaps as entrepreneurs rebuild. The tsunami was the most costly natural disaster in history, and while the Japanese government is helping many industries, people who own stores or small factories need additional support.

“I felt we had to restart our businesses, even though we’d been attacked by the tsunami,” Masato says. “We started selling items outdoors, and brought the older shopkeepers—the ones who were tired—to our market to see what we were doing. They realized: We can do it.”

Masato worked with other small business leaders to draft a plan for the shopping centre. “The government said it would build the mall’s basic structure if we found the land,” he continues. Caritas Japan plans to provide piping, finish the interior walls, and pay for needs like refrigerators. “There will be a fish shop, a bicycle shop, a shoe shop—more than fifty shops want to join,” Masato says. The project is moving forward, and will give employment to many tsunami victims who thought their working lives were over.

Farther south, in a city called Ishinomaki, an older couple runs a family-owned processing plant for seafood. The tsunami wiped out their equipment: “The machines here are digital. Once the water soaked them, they didn’t work at all,” says owner Futoshi Honda. His wife brought the seafood from the plant to an evacuation shelter to feed survivors. Meanwhile, they wondered how they would cope with the mud-logged rooms of the small factory.

Volunteers from Caritas are working up and down the coast to clean out survivors’ homes. Caritas groups, and volunteers from other charities, started coming to the Hondas’ plant to clean up.

“I’m so grateful to Caritas for helping us,” he says. With luck, the assistance will extend to many families. Futoshi has been able to hire some of his staff back, and believes he’ll be able to employ more soon. “I feel I must create jobs,” he says, “so people can start working.”

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Japan after the quake

In a town on the coast of Japan, a ship is beached on dry land after a massive tsunami on March 11, 2011. Credit Laura Sheahen/Caritas

By Laura Sheahen in Kamaishi

When you’re in a tsunami-hit zone, there are no ground floors. At my six-story hotel in Kamaishi, a town on the east coast of Japan, signs point the way to a staircase surrounded by what I assume are “under construction” signs. From the top of the stairs, the third stories of nearby buildings look OK. But at street level, the buildings are just broken frames. Shattered glass, jumbled furniture, and mud-stained scraps of cloth stretch as far as I can see.

Thanks to Japanese engineering, many buildings on the coast withstood the earthquake that struck on March 11, 2011. Even with the ground floor gutted, Japanese engineering is holding up my hotel. But nothing could keep the tsunami water from crashing in.

Cruel geographical accidents determined what the wave destroyed and what was saved. I walk three blocks on flat land, peering into ruined shops and homes. Then, taking about twenty steps, I walk up the slightest of hills to a parish complex that’s now the base for Caritas Japan’s relief efforts here. I wonder where Caritas would be staying if not for that incline.

“The people who live right near the ocean, they knew to act when they heard the tsunami warning,” says a woman visiting with Caritas volunteers at the church. “But people who live more inland couldn’t believe the water would come this far.”

Sitting with four other women in the parish hall–now open as a free Caritas café–she describes how she escaped the wave. Most town residents took their cars first, but when traffic jams made it impossible to move, they got out and started to run. Kamaishi is surrounded by low mountains, and many people headed for a temple at the top of a hill. From there, they watched as vehicles, boats and whole buildings were swept in and then out by the tide. “I couldn’t believe how strong the wave was when it pulled back,” says one woman. “I saw a huge, one-ton ship pushed in, and then dragged back much more quickly. The tsunami destroyed more going out than it did coming in.”

Some of the immense ships never went back to sea. They sit on dry land with green grass sprouting around them. Cranes and earthmoving machines heap debris in enormous piles. Volunteers, including ones from Caritas, sort through the ground rubble.

Six months after the tsunami, most people would like to start rebuilding somewhere. But certain low-lying areas are now restricted until the local government develops its city plans. Land on higher ground is at a premium and the government must use part of it for temporary, prefabricated housing.

“Goodbye baseball,” murmurs Reinhard Wuerkner of Caritas Germany, who is part of a Caritas group visiting the tsunami zone. On a former baseball field, the government has constructed a sophisticated trailer park to house the survivors. Thousands of people along the coast are now living in such trailer parks after their number came up in the housing lottery.

For those who lived in shelters like school gyms for months, the trailers offer much more privacy. They’re small, but very well-equipped, down to the air conditioning, recycling bins, and mail slot. Still, they are a far cry from home.

For now, the trailer parks have one indisputable advantage: their altitude. They’re far from the sea and high up. “I don’t want to live where we lived,” says another woman at the Caritas centre. “The water still comes close to it, especially in the evening.” For those who lived near a shoreline now permanently eaten away in spots, for those who were saved because they were close enough to a hill, height is what matters.

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Snapshot memories from New York to Japan

Caritas Japan volunteers painstakingly clean photos found in debris after a tsunami struck this area of Japan on March 11, 2011. Local residents visit the hall in search of photos of loved ones. Credit: Laura Sheahen/Caritas 2011

By Laura Sheahen in Sendai

“The missing.” It’s been almost ten years to the day since I first heard this phrase uttered with the same quiet, charged intensity. The first time was in Manhattan, the week of September 11, 2001. Today I’m in the tsunami zone of eastern Japan.

I’m with a group looking at the work Caritas Japan has done to comfort and help thousands of people struck by a massive earthquake and tsunami six months ago, on 11 March 2011. As we travel along the devastated coastline, past tilting wrecks of houses and mammoth piles of debris, my Japanese colleagues describe how badly hit each area was: how many people died and how many are missing.

I remember how, as the first shell-shocked days dragged by in New York, photos of the missing papered the city’s subway stations and tree trunks. Here, walls of photos went up in evacuation centres and other gathering places.

In Japan as in New York, there were some happy endings; people found their loved ones alive. But the shadow of the missing, and grief for those known to be dead, hovers other everything.

At Caritas’ base in Sendai, I remember the messages and art sent to St. Paul’s Church near the World Trade Center site. Here, I see familiar tokens of sorrow and solidarity: a poster with “we are with you” written in French; a hanging string of origami birds; a child’s scrawl on a chain made from construction paper.

I see a newspaper photo of a 30-something Japanese woman in jeans carrying an elderly lady on her back, away from a field of rubble, and remember how often heroism and altruism emerge when the worst strikes.

Fr Daisuke Narui stands near a Caritas-run station that provides hot drinks to residents of an evacuation centre in Ishinomaki, Japan. Credit: Laura Sheahen/Caritas

“When I came here in the days after the tsunami, I was struck by how kind people were to each other,” says Fr Daisuke Narui, who coordinates Caritas’ efforts in Sendai. “On the street, people would come up and ask, ‘Are you all right?’”

There’s been a similar outpouring of generosity: people all over the world have donated to Japan. “We got messages from Sri Lanka and Indonesia, places that were hit by a tsunami in 2004,” says Fr Daisuke. “They know our pain.”

For six months, Caritas volunteers have been removing mud and rubble from houses. They’ve been helping people who harvest seafood re-start their work. They’ve been working long hours to be there for families still staying in evacuation centres. They’ve sat beside survivors, listening to their stories of the missing and the dead.

Quietly, the Caritas volunteers have also restored to families something that, like memories, the tsunami didn’t swallow up. “So many photos were found in the debris,” says Father Daisuke. “We clean them and post them, hoping the family will come and find them.”

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10,000 people given Caritas aid after Japan’s earthquake

Volunteers in Shiogama. Credit Caritas Japan 2011

By Caritas Japan staff

Caritas Japan staff members and volunteers have been providing food and other aid to 10,000 survivors following the 11 March earthquake and tsunami. The earthquake was largest to have hit Japan on record and the tsunami caused destruction as far as 10 km inland. The quake caused a serious accident and a 20 km evacuation zone at the Fukushima nuclear power plant. The overall cost could exceed $300 billion, making it the most expensive natural disaster ever.

In some areas, the transitional shelters had been ready and some families have already moved in, but many of the affected are still living in evacuation facilities.They are provided enough food, but are suffering from big stress under this abnormal lifestyle.

The food from Caritas includes ready-to-eat meals, noodles and vegetables, while the other relief items include hygiene kits, clothing and school kits in both the tsunami and the nuclear affected areas. Caritas Japan has been receiving volunteers from all over Japan, who help clean up rubbles in tsunami-affected areas. We have received over 600 volunteers in 4 volunteer bases (Sendai, Shiogama, Ishinomaki and Kamaishi in Miyagi and Iwate prefectures) so far. At one shelter (the evacuation facility is a gymnasium of a public secondary school), our volunteers are conducting a ‘hot water service project’, which have makes it possible for those evacuated to drink hot coffee and tea, make hot instant soup and noodles and also clean themselves up. Some surrounding parishes in Niigata and Saitama dioceses provide shelter and food to the evacuees, and also serve hot meals to the affected people.

Our ideas now are to start providing trauma care services at evacuation facilities and transitional shelters, and to help restore small communities, like fishing communities in the coastal areas. Easter and Our Christ’s Resurrection meant much to us all this year as we joined together and prayed in solidarity for recovery.

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