Showing posts with label Ishinomaki. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ishinomaki. Show all posts

Friday, April 15, 2011

Ishinomaki - The Black Water Documentary

After two rough days of editing, our documentary about the relief trip to Ishinomaki is finally finished. I am very proud of this work and think it is a very heavy and gripping story. 




A documentary film about Ishinomaki in Miyagi prefecture one of the hardest hit areas of the March 11, 2011 tsunami. This documentary deals with the city, the people and relief efforts completed by individuals living in Tokyo to send relief supplies to a center for disabled people in Ishinomaki.
DOUBLE CLICK ON SCREEN FOR HIGH-QUALITY FULL-SIZED VIDEO

DOUBLE CLICK ON SCREEN FOR HIGH-QUALITY FULL-SIZED VIDEO

If the link doesn't work, use this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_8B6cCqtt0o


I thank Ken Nishikawa for the great effort at editing this video and believe this is the finest project I have ever worked on.


I hope you enjoy it.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Creating and Doing World Class Work Takes Planning

There are three things I always like to keep in mind whenever I am doing any project. These are things that I find I must force myself to do as they are not easy to achieve. Those things are:


1) If you are going to do it, do it world class. 


2) To do world class you need to plan. 


3) 80% of success i sin the planning.


Ken Nishikawa and I are now in the middle of editing a documentary video about the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami disaster. We went up to Ishinomaki, the focus of our video, last Saturday April 9, 2011. I wrote about that trip and put up photos in my blog post entitled, Japan's Disaster True Ground Zero - Not Nuclear Power Plants:


Being at Ishinomkai and walking around and taking pictures and breathing the air was like a bad dream: Everything was covered in black sh*t and it smelled like a plugged toilet on a dirty, swampy fishing boat; it was like a nightmare.

Whatever you touched - or didn't touch - it didn't matter: the wrenched smell and rancid seawater mixed with the stench of death... It permeated your nostrils and it permeated your clothes.

I think I will have to shower and scrub heavily for a week or more to maybe have a chance to cleanse this putrid odor from my body pores.

It didn't matter what you touched or felt; you started feeling and smelling like the stinking spoiled, polluted ocean and the odor of death.



We shot a few hours of video footage and looked at it all yesterday and spent a few hours wondering just how it was that we were going to put this all together. Seeing Ishinomaki with your own eyes is much worse than TV. We need to capture the nightmarishness, the smell, the atmosphere of the place.


We need a good plan for that. We watched the footage. We threw around lots of different ways to approach the subject. Some of the idea were good, some of the ideas were terrible.


I think, after much discussion, we finally settled on a pretty good idea.


So far, the video is going brilliantly. I expect to have it up on Youtube within the next 15 ~ 16 hours. I will place a link on this blog for you to see it.


The reason why the video will be world class and "BBC quality" is that Ken & I sat down, before starting and discussed for several hours different ideas and ways to approach the problem. Then we came up with what we thought was a good starting point. We're glad we did.


The discussion and planning were a crucial part of the success of this video project... It is necessary for the success of any project.


Are you discussing and planning enough with your staff before you jump into the project or are you shooting from the hip? Remember, 80% of success is in the planning.


Teamwork requires team effort and team opinion.... Don't do like Dilbert's boss says, "Teamwork is a lot of people doing what I say." 



Monday, April 11, 2011

Ancient Warnings on Tsunami

"If you make a mistake, don't hesitate to correct it" - Ancient Japanese saying


Japan is over 2,700 years old. People today, all over the world, think they are smarter than people of the past. But are we? The tsunami and events of March 11, 2011 suggest that we are not. 
Wilhelm Kempff - Beethoven's Tempest Sonata 3
In a town named Aneyoshi, in northern Japan, there are stone tablets standing on mountains and hillsides warning people not to build homes in lower areas as those are areas that get hit by tsunami. Some of these tablets are over 600 years old. They warn of the dangers of building in the lower lying areas and warn of tsunami that hit the area hundreds of years ago.


The local people all know about these tablets yet, somehow, local government allowed for seawalls to be built that are not as high above sea level as these tablets are. Some families, who have lived in the area for hundreds of years did heed the warnings and they were safe.




TFD News reports:



A natural disaster as large as last month's 9.0 earthquake and tsunami happens perhaps once in a person's lifetime, at most. Tokyo Electric Power Co., the nuclear plant operator, clearly wasn't prepared. Many communities built right to the water's edge, some taking comfort, perhaps, in sea walls built after a deadly but smaller tsunami in 1960.
Many did escape, fleeing immediately after the quake. In some places, it was a matter of minutes. Others who tarried, perished.
"People had this crucial knowledge, but they were busy with their lives and jobs, and many forgot," said Yotaru Hatamura, a scholar who has studied the tablets.
One stone marker warned of the danger in the coastal city of Kesennuma: "Always be prepared for unexpected tsunamis. Choose life over your possessions and valuables."
Tetsuko Takahashi, 70, safe in her hillside house, watched from her front window as others ignored that advice. She saw a ship swept a half-mile (nearly a kilometer) inland, crushing buildings in its path.
"After the earthquake, people went back to their homes to get their valuables and stow their 'tatami' floor mats. They all got caught," she said.
Her family has lived in Kesennuma for generations, but she said those that experienced the most powerful tsunamis died years ago. She can only recall the far weaker one in 1960, generated by an earthquake off Chile.
Earlier generations also left warnings in place names, calling one town "Octopus Grounds" for the sea life washed up by tsunamis and naming temples after the powerful waves, said Fumihiko Imamura, a professor in disaster planning at Tohoku University in Sendai, a tsunami-hit city.
"It takes about three generations for people to forget. Those that experience the disaster themselves pass it to their children and their grandchildren, but then the memory fades," he said.
The tightly knit community of Aneyoshi, where people built homes above the marker, was an exception.
"Everybody here knows about the markers. We studied them in school," said Yuto Kimura, 12, who guided a recent visitor to one near his home. "When the tsunami came, my mom got me from school and then the whole village climbed to higher ground."
Aneyoshi, part of the city of Miyako, has been battered repeatedly by tsunamis, including a huge one in 1896. Isamu Aneishi, 69, said his ancestors moved their family-run inn to higher ground more than 100 years ago.
But his three grandchildren were at an elementary school that sat just 500 feet (150 meters) from the water in Chikei, a larger town down the winding, cliffside road. The school and surrounding buildings are in ruins. The bodies of his grandchildren have not been found.
Hiroshi Kosai grew up in Natori but moved away after high school. His parents, who remained in the family home, died in the disaster.
"I always told my parents it was dangerous here," said the 43-year-old Kosai, as he pointed out the broken foundation where the tablet once stood. "In five years, you'll see houses begin to sprout up here again."
As of now the toll from the disaster stands at: Over 12,000 confirmed dead with the possibility of that number climbing into the area of 25,000 people. There are still more than 100,000 people living in disaster relief centers and temporary housing is being built as quickly as possible. Please see at the very top of this blog the links to where you can donate and help these poor people.

Hopefully, these folks can get their lives and their towns back in order, but let's hope they listen to what the ancient people said.
The towns of Ishinomaki and Kesenuma may not be standing anymore, but these stone tablets warning of tsunami - some that have been around for over 600 years - are still standing today... I imagine they will still be standing another 600 years from now.
How many times will low lying towns have to be rebuilt and how many lives will be lost because of tsunami during that time?

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Japan's Disaster True Ground Zero - Not Nuclear Power Plants

Today I went with 4 friends to deliver relief supplies to Ishinomaki in Miyagi prefecture in Japan. Ishinomaki and Kesenuma were ground zero for the earthquake and tsunami.




Even though many foreigners in Tokyo freaked out and ran out in an irrational panic, there are still a very many who want to be a part of, and help, the Japanese community as this is our home for better or worse (also because Ishinomaki and Kesenuma really are "Ground Zero" for the disaster).


In Ishinomaki and Kesenuma - and surrounding areas - over 27,800 people have lost their lives or disappeared.... The nuclear accident in Fukushima, while serious, is still only responsible for zero deaths and six injured (all who have been released from hospital with no expected complications).


My friends, Michio Hashimoto, Timo Budow, Ken Nishikawa and Roger Marshall all pitched in for the effort.


Michio took the photos below.


These photos say it all. Being at Ishinomkai and walking around and taking pictures and breathing the air was like a bad dream: Everything was covered in black sh*t and it smelled like a plugged toilet on a dirty, swampy fishing boat; it was like a nightmare.


Whatever you touched - or didn't touch - it didn't matter: the wrenched smell and rancid seawater mixed with the stench of death... It permeated your nostrils and it permeated your clothes.


I think I will have to shower and scrub heavily for a week or more to maybe have a chance to cleanse this putrid odor from my body pores.


It didn't matter what you touched or felt; you started feeling and smelling like the stinking spoiled, polluted ocean and the odor of death.

Buildings destroyed and deserted

Cars somehow smashed under buildings

 40 meter long ships landed in neighborhoods that are 250 meters from the bay

Cars inside of shops

Slammed against light poles

The army runs baths that give warmth to over 200 people per day

On the front of the boat is spray-painted "Danger! Do not ride bikes!" 

Two lawn chairs sit undamaged while cars and boats pile upon one another

Notice the car at right

Several ships sit in the middle of streets near the crossways

Every street looks like this or worse

Ditto

Seemingly undamaged but completely abandoned... No electricity or water

View across the river
From the bridge looking towards the ocean (still about 6 kilometers away)

Looks like the view from Hiroshima Dome towards the ocean in 1945

Amazing that some buildings still stood

Houses near the waterfront are totalled

Entire business districts and neighborhoods destroyed

View from the side of a bridge over a river near Ishinomaki

Water heaters for Japanese military set up public baths

There's thousands of places like this with cars stacked on cars

There's thousands of places like this with ships sitting in the middle of neighborhoods all over, Ishinomaki, Kasenuma and other smaller towns and farms along the way. This is the real disaster.

Propeller of 10 tons ship sitting on main thoroughfare.

Mud and dirt caked over park near river

Typical case of rest area and/or park under a foot of mud

Like I said, there's ships like this everywhere

Car hanging over precipice about to fall into river

Finally, we delivered a two-ton truck of supplies to Sunnet Nagomi 
center for the disabled and handicapped in Ishinomaki

Sunnet Nagomi is a center to care for the handicapped and the aged. We delivered, stationary, boots, plastic goods, water and other supplies.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Charity Concert in Shibuya a Great Success.

Last night we held a charity concert in Shibuya and it was a smash success. Thanks to all who attended, performed and contributed. I do appreciate it.


The charity donations for the event:


Red Cross Japan..................................... ¥237,863
Ishinomaki disabled persons center:.............¥88,491 
Grand Total:..............................................¥326,354




A photo of me after counting the proceeds for the Ishinomaki relief trip: ¥88,491!
Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!


The relief caravan to Sunnet Hagomi (facility for the disabled) in Ishinomaki will depart Saturday April 9, 2011. For information about Sunnet Hagomi see here (sorry Japanese language only!): http://www.wam.go.jp/wamappl/hyoka/003hyoka/hyokekka2.nsf/aOpen?OpenAgent&JNO=0400000006&SVC=0001265 We were able to collect ¥88,491 to help pay for the rental of a two-ton truck and to pay for gas expenses and supplies.


Sunnet Hagomi handles support for all disabled and aged in their area and will receive our supplies and then distribute them to the needy from there. Timo Budow has arranged everything with the police for road clearance and made the arrangements with Sunnet Hagomi.


Thanks Timo!


I also want to thank Mr. DiMuzio and the great folks at St. Mary's International School in Tokyo for helping us to make our relief trip a successful endeavor.


We will be bringing these supplies to Sunnet Hagomi:



For kids:  cellophane tape, gum tape, magic markers, pens, color pencils, crayons, paper, scissors, stationery items.

For adults:  shoes , long boots, rain boots, etc.

We will also be bringing along a supply of diapers for children and adults.

I will have more information, a report and a documentary video about our trip to Ishinomaki next week.

Once again, thanks from the bottom of my heart to all who have pitched in. 



------


Here is the information about the show last night:


George Williams, Taro Furukawa and I will be hosting a charity concert for the benefit of the people who have suffered during the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami crisis. This is in cooperation with BAM! (Monday ~ Friday nights from 9 pm ~ 11 pm on 76.1 InterFM) and the good folks at InterFM along with the venue and the bands. Entrance is free and it going to be a lot of fun and we get to help out. 100% of the proceeds will go to Red Cross Japan and I hope to raise an extra ¥50,000 to help finance a DIY relief supplies mission (pay for truck rental and gasoline) to Ishinomaki on April 9, 2011.




Everyone is welcomed. The entrance is free. Donations boxes will be inside. 

Today! Sunday 4/3 Doors open at 4 pm Start 5 pm @ Shibuya The Game

Shibuya The Game: http://www.shibuyathegame.com/SHOPINFO
















Bands Appearing:

Who The Bitch

Moja

Poni Camp

Bliean 

DJ: Wakaan

Entrance is free!!!! Thanks to 76.1 InterFM!
 
Design by emfaruq. All Rights Reserved.