Shikishima no
Yamato-gokoro wo
Hito towaba,
Asa-hi ni niou
Yama-zakura-bana!
I love this poem, which I featured in one of my cherry blossom blog posts our first spring in Japan (all these sakura pictures are from 2009). I think its especially applicable now as sakura trees bloom over a strong and composed people, across a Japan that’s endured more than 800 earthquakes and one killer tsunami in the last month. Chris is now back in our home along the Hikichigawa, the most beautiful place in Japan. He’s continuing to work crazy hours (there’s yet to be a day since the earthquake where he hasn’t gone in to work, and yes, it’s Saturday there now), but he said the Road of a Thousand Blossoms has in fact started to puff out in cherry blossom beauty. My life was in Japan for now (church, friends, job, Chris’ job, home), but my future is elsewhere (baby, the house we’ll buy this fall, next duty station, the rest of our lives).
“This is a society, remember, that has never experienced a popular grassroots revolution in its history. The result is that less cultural value is placed on fairness and social justice, more on personal perseverance and knuckling under — even if that means the environment gets poisoned and people die, either as volunteer fire department heroes or as silent victims after long-term radiation exposure. Afterward, we’ll salute and mourn those who sacrificed themselves for the system, feeling sad for them but grateful that it didn’t happen to us. It’s a cost of living in Japan.
One would hope that Fukushima would occasion review and reform. But I doubt it will. Fukushima has illuminated how the biggest problems facing Japan will not get fixed — because the public cannot or will not force the state to take responsibility for its mistakes. Ultimately, this is what breeds Japan’s undying fatalism.”
AS says
Apollos likes all the pictures of "Aunt Mari Mouse"!
NancyPants says
That article link makes perfect sense to me after living in Japan for my short 2 years. I do miss the sakura blossoms. Enjoy your time with your family and we will keep Chris and the rest of 51 and 14 in our prayers.