"Japan...: keeping calm and carrying on"

haffajappahaffajappa Posts: 5,955
edited March 2011 in All Encompassing Trip
It made me feel really proud when I've been reading articles like this... it's a real testament to the heart of the japanese people...

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... ality.html

Japanese people affected by the earthquake and tsunami maintained a quiet dignity today as they patiently queued for water and food.

Survivors were seen searching for loved ones or helping to clean up streets with few explosions of anger, despite the severity of the tragedy.

Only near the troubled Fukushima nuclear plant, where fears of radiation leaks are frightening residents, were tempers seen to fray.

Osamu Hayasaka was among those receiving free drinks handed out by the owners of a shop in Tagajo, north-eastern Japan.

'There are a lot of older people near where I live, so I'll give them some of this,' the 61-year-old said, strapping two boxes onto his bicycle.

His extended family of six has no power, intermittent water and little food.

But, he said, he is not angry at the government; he understands that officials have other priorities.

Japan is a nation of 127 million people with a long history of disasters, both manmade and natural, from a 1923 earthquake that killed 142,800 in the Tokyo region to the country's doomed entry into the Second World War, which ended with the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

All through these and more recent traumas, including a 1995 earthquake that killed 6,400 in Kobe, the Japanese have endured and rebuilt their country with a usually quiet and uncomplaining resolve.

Now the country's spirit is once again being tested by what its prime minister has called its most severe crisis since the end of the Second World War.

The earthquake and ensuing tsunami killed untold thousands and left many more without shelter and electricity and struggling to find water, fuel and food.

Even as rescuers begin to reach them, officials are desperately trying to prevent serious radiation leaks from the Fukushima nuclear reactors.

Amid the chaos, foreign journalists have remarked on the polite demeanour, the lack of anger, the little if any looting or profiteering that seems to characterise disasters elsewhere.

An American academic, Robert Dujarric, was stuck in a halted bullet train overnight after the earthquake.

Passengers remained calm and didn't pester train staff with questions, said Mr Dujarric, the director of the Institute of Contemporary Japanese Studies at the Temple University campus in Tokyo.

'If you have to spend 16 hours in a stationary train and an additional nine hours getting home, do it in Japan.'

Two phrases offer some insight into the Japanese psyche.

One is 'shikata ga nai', which roughly translates as 'it can't be helped,' and is a common reaction to situations beyond one's control.

The other is 'gaman', considered a virtue. It means to be patient and persevere in the face of suffering.

Theories abound on what makes the Japanese so resilient and prone to group effort.

Some cite the centuries-old need to work together to grow rice on a crowded archipelago prone to natural disasters.

Others point to the hierarchical nature of human relations and a keen fear of shaming oneself before others.

'It strikes me as a Buddhist attitude,' Glenda Roberts, an anthropology professor at Tokyo's Waseda University, said.

'Westerners might tend to see it as passivity, but it's not that. It takes a lot of strength to stay calm in the face of terror.'

While those near the nuclear plants are understandably jittery, survivors elsewhere seem at least outwardly calm.

The low-lying parts of Ofunato, a city up the coast from Tagajo, are flattened. Crushed cars and boats are jumbled with destroyed trees, utility poles and wooden building frames.

Residents are cleaning up the few cleared streets, leaving neatly folded stacks of salvaged clothes on the roadside.

'We've got no clothes, no jobs, no home,' Junko Niiruma, 63, said. 'We don't know what we're going to do.'

At a refugee centre, where children played cards and elderly men read newspapers, some residents said there is frustration, but most people are used to helping each other without being asked.
live pearl jam is best pearl jam
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Comments

  • RKCNDYRKCNDY Posts: 31,013
    Thanks for that great post...sometimes I am embarrassed to be 'American'. In the face of disaster, we have to be aware of those that are trying 'to make a quick buck', or the ones who push, shove and have no regard for anyone else. Those that steal from others who barely have anything...

    Hopefully some of us can learn that being patient and giving in times of need, enrich us all.
    The joy of life comes from our encounters with new experiences, and hence there is no greater joy than to have an endlessly changing horizon, for each day to have a new and different sun.

    - Christopher McCandless
  • WildsWilds Posts: 4,329
    my wife is Japanese. Her Japanese fried was told by her landlord to forget about paying rent for April. He said instead to donate that money to Japan.
  • haffajappahaffajappa Posts: 5,955
    Wilds wrote:
    my wife is Japanese. Her Japanese fried was told by her landlord to forget about paying rent for April. He said instead to donate that money to Japan.
    Wow!

    It's like my father... he aaaaalways thinks about other people before himself, to the point where it becomes annoying lol
    live pearl jam is best pearl jam
  • LizardLizard Posts: 12,091
    It is amazing--their calm in this chaos.
    So I'll just lie down and wait for the dream
    Where I'm not ugly and you're lookin' at me
  • Kilgore_TroutKilgore_Trout Posts: 7,334
    i couldn't believe when i saw on the news that japanese people were lined up outside a grocery store waiting to buy food... if americans were in the same position that place would've been looted in a second

    the sense of restraint and common decency is astonishing given all they've gone through
    "Senza speme vivemo in disio"

    http://seanbriceart.com/
  • in the midst of this awful terrible disaster
    their unity,strength, resilience, care and consideration, patience...
    it's amazing
  • LoulouLoulou Posts: 6,247
    Forgive me if this has already been posted but thought this was great, nice to hear some positives when there's no much sadness:

    http://au.news.yahoo.com/japan-tsunami/ ... cuts-power

    A 70 year old woman was found in the rubble after 4 days of no power and a 20 year old man.
    “ "Thank you Palestrina. It’s a wonderful evening, it’s great to be here and I wanna dedicate you a super sexy song." " (last words of Mark Sandman of Morphine)


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  • chiquimonkeychiquimonkey Posts: 9,337
    This has struck me as well watching the news, how calm and collected everyone is. Sadly here in the US there'd be looting in a second.
    The other is 'gaman', considered a virtue. It means to be patient and persevere in the face of suffering.

    That is a good virtue to embrace in any circumstance, no doubt.
    Wilds wrote:
    my wife is Japanese. Her Japanese fried was told by her landlord to forget about paying rent for April. He said instead to donate that money to Japan.
    What a beautiful gesture!
  • mickeyratmickeyrat Posts: 37,983
    in the midst of this awful terrible disaster
    their unity,strength, resilience, care and consideration, patience...
    it's amazing
    and that is exactly what will see them through this. In addition to showing the world what is possible for a human being. One can hope the world at large is paying attention and learning from these people.
    _____________________________________SIGNATURE________________________________________________

    Not today Sir, Probably not tomorrow.............................................. bayfront arena st. pete '94
    you're finally here and I'm a mess................................................... nationwide arena columbus '10
    memories like fingerprints are slowly raising.................................... first niagara center buffalo '13
    another man ..... moved by sleight of hand...................................... joe louis arena detroit '14
  • ArmogiArmogi Posts: 76
    they are truly inspiring people, they don't deserve that pain, gaman dear friends...
  • prismprism Posts: 2,440
    mickeyrat wrote:
    in the midst of this awful terrible disaster
    their unity,strength, resilience, care and consideration, patience...
    it's amazing
    and that is exactly what will see them through this. In addition to showing the world what is possible for a human being. One can hope the world at large is paying attention and learning from these people.

    indeed...so very true
    *~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
    angels share laughter
    *~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
  • haffajappahaffajappa Posts: 5,955
    Loulou wrote:
    Forgive me if this has already been posted but thought this was great, nice to hear some positives when there's no much sadness:

    http://au.news.yahoo.com/japan-tsunami/ ... cuts-power

    A 70 year old woman was found in the rubble after 4 days of no power and a 20 year old man.
    I saw that earlier today, and a 20-something guy also was found stranded underneath the rubble with a broken leg
    live pearl jam is best pearl jam
  • pearljimpearljim Posts: 1,310
    My relatives are safe in Japan, Fukuoka and Sanda, thank God but I watch everyday as this horrible event just continues to worsen :( And I being half Japanese am SO proud of how they handle themselves.

    I heard a story yesterday that people were in a store when the cash registers stopped working. The people placed their items back from where they got them!!!!

    Please donate to the Red Cross.
    If you have a chance to make life better for others, and fail to do so, you are wasting your time on this earth.

    Roberto Clemente.
  • Empty GlassEmpty Glass Posts: 12,329
    RKCNDY wrote:
    Thanks for that great post...sometimes I am embarrassed to be 'American'. In the face of disaster, we have to be aware of those that are trying 'to make a quick buck', or the ones who push, shove and have no regard for anyone else. Those that steal from others who barely have anything...

    Hopefully some of us can learn that being patient and giving in times of need, enrich us all.

    well said
    I've met Rob

    DEGENERATE FUK

    This place is dead

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  • FifthelementFifthelement Posts: 6,958
    mickeyrat wrote:
    in the midst of this awful terrible disaster
    their unity,strength, resilience, care and consideration, patience...
    it's amazing
    and that is exactly what will see them through this. In addition to showing the world what is possible for a human being. One can hope the world at large is paying attention and learning from these people.

    Very true.
    "What the CANUCK happened?!? - Esquimalt Barber Shop
  • haffajappahaffajappa Posts: 5,955
    pearljim wrote:
    My relatives are safe in Japan, Fukuoka and Sanda, thank God but I watch everyday as this horrible event just continues to worsen :( And I being half Japanese am SO proud of how they handle themselves.

    I heard a story yesterday that people were in a store when the cash registers stopped working. The people placed their items back from where they got them!!!!

    Please donate to the Red Cross.
    Glad to hear your relatives are safe!!!
    We're still waiting on word from my aunts whether or not they got a hold of my uncle
    live pearl jam is best pearl jam
  • PureandEasyPureandEasy Posts: 5,799
    RKCNDY wrote:
    Thanks for that great post...sometimes I am embarrassed to be 'American'. In the face of disaster, we have to be aware of those that are trying 'to make a quick buck', or the ones who push, shove and have no regard for anyone else. Those that steal from others who barely have anything...

    Hopefully some of us can learn that being patient and giving in times of need, enrich us all.

    It really is refreshing to see the respect and patience among these people in such a horrific moment in history.

    There are some people here in America that are ready to take what ever they can get, to act like buffoons.

    I have to say though, I work for the American Red Cross, and the generosity of American's never ceases to amaze me. So let's not lump the bad in with the good. The good definitely outweigh the bad.
  • FenwayFaithfulFenwayFaithful Posts: 8,626
    I applaud the Japanese people for their resolve and hope. My thoughts have been on the wonderful people of Japan for the last few days now. If there's any country out there that can come out stronger after a disaster like this, it's them.
    "FF, I've heard the droning about the Sawx being the baby dolls. Yeah, I get it, you guys invented baseball and suffered forever. I get it." -JearlPam0925
  • pearljimpearljim Posts: 1,310
    haffajappa wrote:
    pearljim wrote:
    My relatives are safe in Japan, Fukuoka and Sanda, thank God but I watch everyday as this horrible event just continues to worsen :( And I being half Japanese am SO proud of how they handle themselves.

    I heard a story yesterday that people were in a store when the cash registers stopped working. The people placed their items back from where they got them!!!!

    Please donate to the Red Cross.
    Glad to hear your relatives are safe!!!
    We're still waiting on word from my aunts whether or not they got a hold of my uncle

    I will pray for your uncle....

    Jim
    If you have a chance to make life better for others, and fail to do so, you are wasting your time on this earth.

    Roberto Clemente.
  • HeavyHandsHeavyHands Posts: 2,130
    I made a thread in the AMT area which contains links to charitable organizations if anyone would like to donate.

    I don't go in AMT much so I'm guessing maybe others don't either. In case you don't, here it is:

    http://forums.pearljam.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=151186
    "A lot more people are capable of being big out there that just don't give themselves a chance." -Stone Gossard
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