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11/2/2020 Newly Homeless Re-Establish Order Amid Chaos - The New York Times

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Newly Homeless in Japan Re-Establish Order Amid Chaos


Brendan Wright
bw3400@panthernet.net
By Michael Wines
Peedro Does Things
March 25, 2011
peedroman@gmail.com

RIKUZENTAKATA, Japan — Koji Yamaguchi, a 76-year-old survivor of the tsunami that all but eradicated this town on
March 11, was unavailable for interviews. He was out walking his dog.

Which would be unsurprising, were Mr. Yamaguchi not an evacuee himself, living on a 9-by-9-foot grass mat in a junior
high school gymnasium here with 1,000 other people.

To an outsider, much is striking about Japan’s response to two weeks of serial disasters: the stoicism and self-sacrifice; the
quiet bravery in the face of tragedy that seems almost woven into the national character. Just as striking, however, is that
evacuees here live in a place that can kennel your dog, charge your cellphone, fix your dentures and even provide that
nonnegotiable necessity of Japanese life, a steamy soak in a hot tub of water.

There is a free laundry service, too, although they are still working out clothes-drying kinks.

Just two weeks after this nation’s greatest catastrophe in decades, the citizens at Takada Junior High School No. 1, this
town’s largest evacuee center, have managed to fashion a microcosm of the spotlessly organized and efficient Japan they
so recently knew.

Theirs is a city where a hand sanitizer sits on every table; where face masks, which Japanese wear the way other people
wear sunglasses, are dispensed by the box. It is a place where you do not just trade your muddy shoes for slippers at the
front door, but also shed the slippers at the gymnasium door lest you carry a mote of dust from the hallways into the living
areas.

Shoichi Yanashita, 66, and Noriaki, 34, his son, gave free haircuts. “We have to support
each other,” the older man said, “and this is what I know how to do.” Shiho Fukada for
International Herald Tribune

“It’s hard to gather these people to live together here,” Tsutomu Nakai, the soft-spoken 61-year-old retiree who manages
the center, said on Thursday. “They all have different lifestyles and different personalities. But so far, people have
volunteered to help each other, and it works very well.”

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11/2/2020 Newly Homeless Re-Establish Order Amid Chaos - The New York Times

None of this is to suggest that Takada Junior High is the Waldorf. There is immense suffering and personal misery here:
grieving survivors, financial ruin, smelly bodies, no running water, frigid outdoor Sign in to nytimes.com with Google
toilets, endless boredom and the
prospect of sleeping on a hard floor with complete strangers for weeks — even months — to come.
Brendan Wright
But this, too, seems to be part of the national character: a passion for order and civility so deep-rooted that the chaos and
bw3400@panthernet.net

despair of 1,000 strangers somehow is subdued to the level of disarray expected at the monthly meeting of a book-lovers’
Peedro Does Things
club.
peedroman@gmail.com

The spirit is captured by the hand-drawn signs that adorn the gym: “Let’s be grateful that we are alive”; “Cheer up,
Takata”; “Let’s communicate and bond our hearts.”

The messages are lived in simple ways. One expects that 1,000 evacuees would have access to a doctor, and the Japan Red
Cross has opened a well-staffed clinic on the first floor. But one might not expect the two dentists next door, who decided
on March 17 to volunteer their services and opened shop the next day, treating about 15 patients daily with the help of staff
members whose own homes were lost in the tsunami.

“I don’t have any other place to work, because my office washed away,” said Masanori Yoshiday, 60. “We can rebuild the
office later.”

The New York Times

The dentists were followed by Shoichi Yanashita, a 66-year-old barber and a fellow evacuee, who was giving free haircuts
on Thursday with scissors and a razor borrowed from a friend in a nearby town. “We have to support each other,” he said,
“and this is what I know how to do.”

Hair cutting and dentistry joined a long list of services, donated and otherwise: volunteer bicycle-repairing, a shuttle bus
ferrying evacuees from center to center, pet cages donated by local veterinarians, free laundering of refugees’ clothes by
local high-school students.

Drying remains a problem. “We have to dry the ladies’ underwear where people can’t see it. So we put it in two classrooms
on the second floor, and then we lock the doors,” said Mr. Nakai, the evacuee center manager. Classes at the school have
been suspended since the disaster.

Asked whether he has had to deal with petty thievery, personality conflicts or any other social ills that beset strangers
unwillingly thrown together, Mr. Nakai replied: “Nothing at all. They don’t even argue.”

Not quite true, said Hiroe Sasaki, a 42-year-old evacuee. “We had only one blanket for each person on the first day,” she
said. “People did get stressed. Some shouted at each other.”
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11/2/2020 Newly Homeless Re-Establish Order Amid Chaos - The New York Times

And now? “They wouldn’t tell me,” she said, “but I know some people aren’t happy that other families have more blankets
than they do.” Sign in to nytimes.com with Google

Ms. Sasaki staffs the help desk in the gymnasium, the urban center of this makeshift town.Wright
Brendan To the right is the lending
bw3400@panthernet.net
library. To the left is a cardboard mailbox where evacuees can deposit postcards — also available at the desk — that are
delivered to other centers around town.
Peedro Does Things
peedroman@gmail.com
Opposite her desk are recycling bins for burnable trash, plastic, glass and metal (subdivided into aluminum and steel). On
the desk and adjacent shelves, free for the asking, are batteries, hand and foot warmers, cotton gloves, pens and paper,
plastic trash bags and eye drops for the tree pollen that is spreading with the arrival of spring. A small box holds
cellphones that have been charged at the power strip behind her chair. Beside the chair is a wireless microphone used to
deliver the news through the gymnasium’s sound system, heralded by the four-chime alert often heard in train stations
and airports.

This week, Japan’s Self Defense Force soldiers offered a much-coveted new service: two hot tubs for men and women,
holding 25 bathers at a time, at a nearby elementary school that also houses evacuees. Now the Takada center offers daily
shuttle buses to the tubs, which sit side by side in steam-saturated tents outside the school entrance.

The orderliness extends to the residents, who have assembled the detritus of two weeks on a gym floor — donated clothes,
blankets, folding chairs — into neat barriers that provide a modicum of privacy from the neighbors. The gym floor is
carved into neighborhoods, each with a representative who carries grievances to higher-ups.

Not that there are any grievances, of course — at least those that people are willing to admit publicly in a culture that
prizes the capacity for endurance.

“Some people gather around the space heater at nights because they can’t sleep. The young people, especially, snore really
loudly,” said Yukiko Yamaguchi, 73, who lost her home in the tsunami.

“But it’s unconscious,” she added quickly. “You can’t complain about that.”

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