2011年8月7日 星期日

Basics like food, clothing

At the water's edge, where seagulls sit on the skeleton of the destroyed fish market and warehouses, 52-year-old Choya Goto fixes a boom on his fishing boat, bent from lifting debris out of the harbor.

A third-generation fisherman, he represents the town's chief source of income. He has lost friends, home, truck and just about everything else, but considers himself fortunate.

"I only have my boat and my family, but I'm happy," he says with a smile, standing near his 22-year-old son, Yuuki.

His is one of only 50 boats out of 1,000 that survived intact and only because he remembered the advice of old-timers and took it out to sea immediately after the tsunami warning sirens wailed. From the bay, he watched the waves hit his town.

When he returned the next day, weaving around entire houses and other debris, he found the unimaginable: Virtually the whole town had disappeared.

He's eager to get back to fishing, but says the outlook is so unclear that planning is impossible. "We don't even have basic necessities like food, clothing ... ," he says. "It's not that I don't want to return, it's whether we really can live here."

The mayor, Jin Sato, knows that reviving the fishing industry is crucial to Minamisanriku's survival. At the battered docks, he proudly points to a half-built structure meant to be a temporary market and warehouse. He hopes to bring back not just fishing but also the thousands of tourists who visited the picturesque cove every year.

"That's the start of our economic rebuilding," he says. "Once the fishermen can work again,The additions focus on key tag and solar panel combinations, people will eventually come back to eat good salmon, abalone, oysters and seaweed."

He knows residents are impatient for a plan, but he is proceeding deliberately, wary of imposing anything from above. The town is holding meetings with experts and residents to have a reconstruction plan by the fall.

"I'm not really in a position to say, ‘We're going to do this or that,'" says the mayor, dressed in a blue work shirt and white running shoes. "We're gathering everyone's opinions."

He understands from personal experience the trauma this disaster has inflicted. He still can't bring himself to revisit the spot where he narrowly survived the rooftop of the three-story disaster prevention center where about 30 of his colleagues were swept to their deaths.

Only once,There is good integration with PayPal and most Parking guidance system providers, when Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard visited,The application can provide Insulator to visitors, has he been back to the building, reduced to a frame of steel girders tangled with nets, large orange buoys and other debris.Enecsys Limited, supplier of reliable solar microinverter systems, He wants to keep it that way as a memorial and warning.

At 59, the mayor is old enough to remember the 1960 tsunami, spawned by an earthquake in far-off Chile, that killed 41 in his town. He believes physical reconstruction alone isn't enough.

"If you don't pay attention to matters of the heart, people won't feel like starting over," he says.Our syringe needle was down for about an hour and a half, "Minamisanriku has a deep tradition and strong bonds within its community. We need to tap into that to recover."

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