Monday, March 28, 2011

In Japan, sifting through the rubble

Kamihachi, Japan -- Meguni Sasaki, right, and her husband Satoru Sasaki, both 36, return to their neighborhood to collect what few possessions they can find after the devastating earthquake and tsunami. One of the items was a couch. "This used to be in our living room," said Meguni Sasaki. "It was so expensive." Satoru located the second floor of their home about a quarter of a mile away from its original location, where they also found a couch and a few possessions. (Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times)

Kamihachi, Japan -- Meguni Sasaki, left, talks to her cousin, Kouno Takayaki, right, whom she hadn't seen since the tsunami hit two weeks ago. She shows him some of the few items she has been able to recover from the family home after the tsunami swept it away. (Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times)






Kamihachi, Japan -- "There is nothing left," says Meguni Sasaki, as she scans the ground looking for remnants of her home, swept away by the tsunami. Sasaki and her husband Satoru Sasaki were not at home when the tsunami struck; their two daughters escaped with grandparents to a nearby mountain temple. The roof of another temple landed near their property, moved there by the giant wave.

KamihachiI, Japan -- A photograph of daughter Yua Sasaki, 9, on a school field trip, and a bowl are some of the few possession Meguni Sasaki and her husband Satoru Sasaki were able to find after the tsunami destroyed their home and neighborhood. Satoru says photographs of his two daughters are all he is hoping to find. (Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times)


One family searches through the remains of their seaside home, hunting with calm resolve for any surviving possessions. It's an experience shared by countless others.

March 27, 2011
By John M. Glionna
Los Angeles Times

Reporting from Kamihachi, Japan— Megumi Sasaki was looking for the white bicycle helmet.

Working patiently, a flock of seabirds nagging incessantly overhead, the 36-year-old mother of two sifted through the rubble of the only home she had ever known, taken from her by the devastating wave that swallowed this seaside community on March 11.

She had bought the helmet for her daughter Sara's seventh birthday. But she had hidden it in a family car swept away by the tsunami that rolled across northeast Japan on the heels of a killer magnitude 9 quake.

Both the helmet and the car were missing, like so many other possessions.

Only a few weeks ago, her quaint two-story home was a repository of precious moments, Sasaki's personal refuge from any storm, the place that housed four generations of her family: her and her grandparents, parents, husband and their two young daughters.


Now it was gone, reduced to a concrete and wood foundation and a few daily items from a past life: a mangled sink lying in the mud, a dismembered toilet seat and several scattered chopsticks.

Megumi Sasaki and her husband, Satoru, had returned to a place that no longer existed as before, an experience shared by seemingly countless families here. Some homes were demolished by the mammoth wave; others contorted into grotesque, cartoonish shapes, never again to be inhabited.

Wearing white cotton gloves with green plastic fingertips, her long brown hair tied up in a flowered bow, the hospital nurse said she had returned home for the first time just days after the disaster.

For Megumi, it was a hellish homecoming.

That day, from a rise in the road, she looked down at her once tightknit community of 20 homes, and she gasped.

"It was mayhem," she said. "I cried when I saw it."

But she and her family counted their blessings: All eight household members survived. The children, Sara and 9-year-old Yua, along with Megumi's parents and her grandparents, both in their 90s, were now safe at a relative's house, leaving Megumi and Satoru to return to their old neighborhood to search for tiny pieces of their past.

Megumi has returned nearly every day.

"I'm looking for something I can recognize," she said Thursday, "something I can pick up and say 'This is mine.' "

On a gray afternoon, the couple spread out across a vast landscape of destruction, going about their search with a calm resolve.

Wearing a white towel as a bandana, Satoru, on a hunch, walked down a makeshift lane carved through waist-high piles of twisted detritus, all the time watching closely.

Within minutes, he saw it: the second story of their home, ripped off and dropped nearly a quarter of a mile away. He called to his wife, smiling in amazement.

Megumi said finding the second floor had special meaning.

"My father and grandfather were carpenters," she said. "Together, they built this addition with their own hands 10 years ago so we had a place to live when we got married."

They made another find: a color photograph of Yua on a class field trip with a clutch of other youngsters. In the photo Yua is smiling. That made her father smile, too.

"Photos of my children, that's all I'm looking for," said the 36-year-old construction worker, his voice trailing off. "Just some memories."

Neither Megumi nor Satoru was at home when the tsunami rushed in, only the girls and their older relatives, who hurried to a mountainside temple.

But Satoru's mother, who lived nearby, was taken by the wave. Her body lay in a makeshift mortuary.

As he and his wife searched, Satoru tried to block out the future's sadness. He concentrated only on the here and now, piecing his life back together one personal item at a time.

He found a blue teacup caked with mud. With a white-gloved index finger, he calmly wiped the dirt like a husband on after-dinner kitchen duty.

Megumi squealed with girlish delight each time she made a find: her daughter's pink plastic swimming bag, a few plates, a pair of brown pants that she carefully folded and placed inside a school bag.

The other day, the Sasaki girls had returned with their parents. They didn't cry, their mother recalled, but acted like grownups. "They were just silent," she said. "It wasn't like them."

Saturo said many neighbors have fled to live with relatives in other prefectures. But all of the couple's clan lives nearby. "We have nowhere to escape to," Megumi said.

The afternoon drew to a close. The couple walked toward a relative's car; all five of the family's vehicles were lost in the flood. Suddenly, Megumi ran into a cousin, 41-year-old Kouno Takayuki. It was their first meeting since the disaster, and they held a long embrace.

Then, in an intimate gesture, Megumi knelt on the roadside and displayed the contents of her bag.

She said the tsunami taught her a hard lesson: A house is more than a place to sleep and cook; it's a psychological roof that helps to maintain a family's unique blood bond.

Then the couple drove off to collect the body of Saturo's mother. They planned to return to their neighborhood the next morning.

Megumi still wanted to find that white bicycle helmet.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Once you have seen this kind of sufferings, can you still steal your fellow citizen lands to build up your wealth?
Japanese people are valueing very much for their very well disciplined and very high civilised. If this phenomenon was happinning in Cambodia, there would be a lot of people gone out to the scene looking for properties for the sufferers instead of helping the sufferers such as during the incident of the koh Pich bridge. We need to traine ourselves from the top to the bottom.
Our leaders are wanting to richer than anyone else in the country. If he saw people below him is richer than him his eyes will be very red. That is the mentality of Cambodian leader. That is why our people is keeping suffering.

Areak Prey

Anonymous said...

Areak Prey,

You hit the nail right on the head!

The problem is that it is not easy to teach Cambodians to change their characters!

Those characters may have been the causes all along of some of their sufferings and loss of territorial integrity.

Anonymous said...

Japan or Far East country is the third richest country in the world.
The Japaneses work so hard to build
their country.The Japan is the free
world country in the sun rise kingdom.
I love Japan and Japaneses.They are
nice and lovable people.
I am so sad what happening in Japan recently.The nature never tolerates
any kinds of living things or any things in the world ; there are nothing which can escape from any kinds of nature.
All human beings must bear with dangerous nature.
The only things that we do are love,care,support,and help the victims.

Anonymous said...

Japan will rebuilt this city in a yrs faster than Khmer in government in 50 yrs. LOL

Anonymous said...

8:54 PM, you are a fucking Yuon/Vietcong bastard. Your Vietcong/Yuon Hanoi idiots (Bitches and Bastards) have been controlling Hun Sen and his CPP Youn high ranking members for more than three decades, misleading Cambodia, destroying natural resources, allowing millions of illegal Yuon/Vietcong folks to live in Cambodia freely and take advantage of Cambodia and overfishing in Mekong lakes, hurting innocent Cambodian people, slowing down the development in Cambodia, over taking everything from Cambodia to Vietnam, creating the dirty secret plans to wipe out Cambodian people and then taking the entire Cambodian, creating a lawless country and authoritarians, creating dirty business and bribing, creating child trafficking and prostitutes, selling Cambodia country, destroying Cambodian forests, land grabbing, and on and on...What the fuck, your Yuon/Vietnam Communist Hanoi bastards have been doing to order greedy Hun Sen and CPP Youn high ranking members to destroy Cambodia, steal the money by adding the number of illegal Viet/Yuon people in Cambodia and bring the money to Hanoi, ... You know what? You and Hanoi communist bastards including Hun Sen and CPP Yuons will be crushed to death and die like hell one of these days by NATO key allies, the UN, powerful countries...I can't believe you and your evil crooks and killers.