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Japan’s children of the tsunami shaped by tragedy

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Yuto Naganuma looks silently as the cold sea breeze sweeps over the crumbling walls of the school where his little brother was lost in Japan's devastating 2011 tsunami.

Ten years on, Naganuma and others like him form a generation whose young lives were shaped by what is known in Japan as the triple disaster: a powerful earthquake that sparked a terrifying tsunami and the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl.

The children of the tsunami lost family, homes, schools and entire communities, and for some the experience sparked a drive to work in disaster awareness, or help children like them who have lived with tragedy.

Even a decade on, the devastation Naganuma suffered is raw.

2011 Japan earthquake and tsunami: Ishonomaki
2011 Japan earthquake and tsunami: Ishonomaki
Laurence CHU, AFP

"I lost my family, my community. Things that built who I am. I felt the tsunami carved away half of my body," he said outside the Okawa Elementary School in northeast Japan, where his eight-year-old brother was killed.

He was among 74 children and 10 school staff killed in one of the worst tragedies of the disaster that left around 18,500 people dead or missing, swept away after staff failed to evacuate to higher ground.

Naganuma was just 16 at the time, but blamed himself for the loss.

Naganuma's eight-year-old brother was among 74 children and 10 staff killed at Okawa Elementary...
Naganuma's eight-year-old brother was among 74 children and 10 staff killed at Okawa Elementary School, in one of the worst tragedies of the disaster that left around 18,500 people dead or missing
Behrouz MEHRI, AFP

Two days before the 9.0 magnitude quake struck, he felt a major 7.3 tremor on a local beach, which he saw later as a missed warning.

"I feel maybe my brother did not have to die. Had I warned people in the community, maybe they didn't have to die," he told AFP as he gazed at gutted classrooms.

His grandmother and great-grandmother were also killed in the tsunami, as they waited for his brother's school bus.

"I am filled with regret," he said. "I let the day come without taking any action."

- 'Living between disasters' -

In the years after, Naganuma focused on leading a normal life, but he struggled with survivor's guilt, wondering why he had been spared.

Nayuta Ganbe has gradually come around to speaking about his experience of the tsunami
Nayuta Ganbe has gradually come around to speaking about his experience of the tsunami
Behrouz MEHRI, AFP

He enrolled in a teaching course at a university in another region but eventually moved to a school closer to his home to study disaster management.

He now gives tours at the school and lectures on disaster preparedness.

In Japan and elsewhere, "all of us are living in the time between disasters," he said.

"How we spend this time significantly changes the probability of survival when we face the next disaster."

Nayuta Ganbe, 21, has also gradually come around to speaking about his experience of the tsunami.

He took shelter at his school with his mother and sister after a tsunami warning was issued following the quake.

They were meant to be on the third floor, but Ganbe went to retrieve his outdoor shoes, which Japanese students leave at the entrance.

Ganbe took shelter at his school with his mother and sister after a tsunami warning was issued follo...
Ganbe took shelter at his school with his mother and sister after a tsunami warning was issued following the quake
Behrouz MEHRI, AFP

As he held open the door for five men still coming towards the school, a torrent of water mixed with oily sludge and carrying debris and vehicles knocked the men over and pulled them down.

Ganbe was on slightly higher ground but the water, "thick like mayonnaise", quickly flooded round him.

"It was like the water grabbed my ankles," he said.

A man being carried away shouted and stretched his arm towards Ganbe, who stood paralysed as the water surged.

"When his finger tips were completely submerged, I snapped out of it," he said.

Media coverage emphasised polite evacuees and national solidarity  but Ganbe saw adults jump lines f...
Media coverage emphasised polite evacuees and national solidarity, but Ganbe saw adults jump lines for food, pushing children aside
Behrouz MEHRI, AFP

The aftermath of the disaster was barely less traumatic -- Ganbe recalls finding a body days after, and a limb while walking to school, an experience not uncommon for children in the area at the time.

Media coverage emphasised polite evacuees and national solidarity, but Ganbe saw adults jump lines for food, pushing children aside. For several days after the tsunami he ate nothing.

Pupils were discouraged from talking about "missing" friends and some experienced panic attacks.

"Before you knew it, it became normal not to talk about it," he said.

But three years after the disaster, he was asked to deliver a talk and began to process his memories, enduring flashbacks and sleepless nights.

- 'Torn apart' -

Ganbe shows the name of his friend who was killed during Japan's 2011 tsunami
Ganbe shows the name of his friend who was killed during Japan's 2011 tsunami
Behrouz MEHRI, AFP

He now studies disaster sociology, investigating what makes people more likely to take the right steps to save themselves when crisis hits, and speaks to groups nationwide, in part to preserve memories that he fears are fading.

"Even in this area, the subject is becoming something that you see in textbooks," he said.

He feels those who were adults at the time are often reluctant to stir up painful memories while younger people like his little sister remember only fragmented feelings of fear.

Hazuki Shimizu fled her home with her mother and sister the day after the tsunami
Hazuki Shimizu fled her home with her mother and sister the day after the tsunami
Behrouz MEHRI, AFP

"Give it 20 years and we may see 20-year-olds, who were born after the disaster, who will leave home without knowing about it."

The tsunami marked not only children caught up in its direct path, but also those affected by the nuclear disaster at Fukushima Daiichi.

Hazuki Shimizu lived in Namie, a few kilometres from the reactors that went into meltdown after the tsunami overwhelmed the plant's cooling system.

She fled her home with her mother and sister on March 12, eventually ending up in Chiba, outside Tokyo.

"I was literally torn apart," the 27-year-old recalled of watching the unfolding disaster from afar. "I couldn't do anything."

Shimizu moved back to the coastal region and now works for a group helping preserve memories of the ...
Shimizu moved back to the coastal region and now works for a group helping preserve memories of the tsunami
Behrouz MEHRI, AFP

She was safe, but not always sheltered from pain.

At the local city hall, her family was kept in the car park and monitored for radiation with Geiger counters when they came to register her for a new school.

And her new classmates were silent about the disaster.

"I just didn't know why people were not talking about this... Why didn't they care? I felt very isolated."

As an adult, she moved back to the coastal region and now works for a group helping preserve memories of the tsunami.

"Once I became a disaster victim, I learned that it was very hard," said Shimizu, who has also worked with groups offering children tutoring and community spaces.

"There are so many people who are experiencing sorrow and struggles," she said.

"We need to hear their voices and stand by them."

Yuto Naganuma looks silently as the cold sea breeze sweeps over the crumbling walls of the school where his little brother was lost in Japan’s devastating 2011 tsunami.

Ten years on, Naganuma and others like him form a generation whose young lives were shaped by what is known in Japan as the triple disaster: a powerful earthquake that sparked a terrifying tsunami and the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl.

The children of the tsunami lost family, homes, schools and entire communities, and for some the experience sparked a drive to work in disaster awareness, or help children like them who have lived with tragedy.

Even a decade on, the devastation Naganuma suffered is raw.

2011 Japan earthquake and tsunami: Ishonomaki

2011 Japan earthquake and tsunami: Ishonomaki
Laurence CHU, AFP

“I lost my family, my community. Things that built who I am. I felt the tsunami carved away half of my body,” he said outside the Okawa Elementary School in northeast Japan, where his eight-year-old brother was killed.

He was among 74 children and 10 school staff killed in one of the worst tragedies of the disaster that left around 18,500 people dead or missing, swept away after staff failed to evacuate to higher ground.

Naganuma was just 16 at the time, but blamed himself for the loss.

Naganuma's eight-year-old brother was among 74 children and 10 staff killed at Okawa Elementary...

Naganuma's eight-year-old brother was among 74 children and 10 staff killed at Okawa Elementary School, in one of the worst tragedies of the disaster that left around 18,500 people dead or missing
Behrouz MEHRI, AFP

Two days before the 9.0 magnitude quake struck, he felt a major 7.3 tremor on a local beach, which he saw later as a missed warning.

“I feel maybe my brother did not have to die. Had I warned people in the community, maybe they didn’t have to die,” he told AFP as he gazed at gutted classrooms.

His grandmother and great-grandmother were also killed in the tsunami, as they waited for his brother’s school bus.

“I am filled with regret,” he said. “I let the day come without taking any action.”

– ‘Living between disasters’ –

In the years after, Naganuma focused on leading a normal life, but he struggled with survivor’s guilt, wondering why he had been spared.

Nayuta Ganbe has gradually come around to speaking about his experience of the tsunami

Nayuta Ganbe has gradually come around to speaking about his experience of the tsunami
Behrouz MEHRI, AFP

He enrolled in a teaching course at a university in another region but eventually moved to a school closer to his home to study disaster management.

He now gives tours at the school and lectures on disaster preparedness.

In Japan and elsewhere, “all of us are living in the time between disasters,” he said.

“How we spend this time significantly changes the probability of survival when we face the next disaster.”

Nayuta Ganbe, 21, has also gradually come around to speaking about his experience of the tsunami.

He took shelter at his school with his mother and sister after a tsunami warning was issued following the quake.

They were meant to be on the third floor, but Ganbe went to retrieve his outdoor shoes, which Japanese students leave at the entrance.

Ganbe took shelter at his school with his mother and sister after a tsunami warning was issued follo...

Ganbe took shelter at his school with his mother and sister after a tsunami warning was issued following the quake
Behrouz MEHRI, AFP

As he held open the door for five men still coming towards the school, a torrent of water mixed with oily sludge and carrying debris and vehicles knocked the men over and pulled them down.

Ganbe was on slightly higher ground but the water, “thick like mayonnaise”, quickly flooded round him.

“It was like the water grabbed my ankles,” he said.

A man being carried away shouted and stretched his arm towards Ganbe, who stood paralysed as the water surged.

“When his finger tips were completely submerged, I snapped out of it,” he said.

Media coverage emphasised polite evacuees and national solidarity  but Ganbe saw adults jump lines f...

Media coverage emphasised polite evacuees and national solidarity, but Ganbe saw adults jump lines for food, pushing children aside
Behrouz MEHRI, AFP

The aftermath of the disaster was barely less traumatic — Ganbe recalls finding a body days after, and a limb while walking to school, an experience not uncommon for children in the area at the time.

Media coverage emphasised polite evacuees and national solidarity, but Ganbe saw adults jump lines for food, pushing children aside. For several days after the tsunami he ate nothing.

Pupils were discouraged from talking about “missing” friends and some experienced panic attacks.

“Before you knew it, it became normal not to talk about it,” he said.

But three years after the disaster, he was asked to deliver a talk and began to process his memories, enduring flashbacks and sleepless nights.

– ‘Torn apart’ –

Ganbe shows the name of his friend who was killed during Japan's 2011 tsunami

Ganbe shows the name of his friend who was killed during Japan's 2011 tsunami
Behrouz MEHRI, AFP

He now studies disaster sociology, investigating what makes people more likely to take the right steps to save themselves when crisis hits, and speaks to groups nationwide, in part to preserve memories that he fears are fading.

“Even in this area, the subject is becoming something that you see in textbooks,” he said.

He feels those who were adults at the time are often reluctant to stir up painful memories while younger people like his little sister remember only fragmented feelings of fear.

Hazuki Shimizu fled her home with her mother and sister the day after the tsunami

Hazuki Shimizu fled her home with her mother and sister the day after the tsunami
Behrouz MEHRI, AFP

“Give it 20 years and we may see 20-year-olds, who were born after the disaster, who will leave home without knowing about it.”

The tsunami marked not only children caught up in its direct path, but also those affected by the nuclear disaster at Fukushima Daiichi.

Hazuki Shimizu lived in Namie, a few kilometres from the reactors that went into meltdown after the tsunami overwhelmed the plant’s cooling system.

She fled her home with her mother and sister on March 12, eventually ending up in Chiba, outside Tokyo.

“I was literally torn apart,” the 27-year-old recalled of watching the unfolding disaster from afar. “I couldn’t do anything.”

Shimizu moved back to the coastal region and now works for a group helping preserve memories of the ...

Shimizu moved back to the coastal region and now works for a group helping preserve memories of the tsunami
Behrouz MEHRI, AFP

She was safe, but not always sheltered from pain.

At the local city hall, her family was kept in the car park and monitored for radiation with Geiger counters when they came to register her for a new school.

And her new classmates were silent about the disaster.

“I just didn’t know why people were not talking about this… Why didn’t they care? I felt very isolated.”

As an adult, she moved back to the coastal region and now works for a group helping preserve memories of the tsunami.

“Once I became a disaster victim, I learned that it was very hard,” said Shimizu, who has also worked with groups offering children tutoring and community spaces.

“There are so many people who are experiencing sorrow and struggles,” she said.

“We need to hear their voices and stand by them.”

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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