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Humanitarian Activities of Mata Amritanandamayi

Japan Relief Efforts

Four Days in Ishinomaki - Relief and Reflections from Japan:

For more than 10 years, the Japanese student volunteer organization IVUSA has been sending groups of students to India to participate in Embracing the World’s housing projects for the homeless and for disaster refugees. These students participated in ETW projects to build homes for tsunami refugees in both Kerala and Tamil Nadu after the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami. And in 2010, after devastating floods in Karnataka, they helped ETW to build homes for people whose islands had been entirely submerged by floodwaters. Many of the volunteers have made several trips to India for this purpose.

Koichi Kanematsu is Embracing the World’s coordinator for these annual housing projects. After the earthquake and tsunami in Japan, Koichi flew to Japan to lend his considerable organizing capability and experience in disaster relief to help many of the same volunteers he has worked with in India to carry out relief work in the hard-hit Miyagi Prefecture. While supporting their work, Koichi was simultaneously working to identify the specific needs of the disaster refugees which Embracing the World can help to meet.

Click here to view photos and read the full report >

 

Embracing the World Launches Relief Effort in Japan:

In response to the devastation caused by the recent earthquake and tsunami in Japan, Embracing the World representatives have already traveled to hard-hit Sendai to provide food and water for refugees and to assess conditions on the ground. We will soon be initiating a broader relief effort.

Embracing the World Volunteers Distribute Food and Water in Sendai; Assess Conditions on the Ground

March 14, 2011

Embracing the World has sent its first group of local volunteers from our Japan Center to Sendai - the major city nearest the epicenter of the earthquake, and hit hard by both the quake (Japan's worst-ever) and the subsequent tsunami. At Amma's request, the ETW representatives went to Sendai in order to study the situation on the ground and also to distribute food and water for the refugees.

Here is their report:

We set out for Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture on 13 March, within 3 days of the disaster. Because all the highways going north are completely locked down for military and authorized use only, we had to take the ordinary road for approximately 400 kilometers. On the way, we had to drive through an area just 40 kilometers away from the Fukushima nuclear plants, which have started emitting dangerous radiation.

On the day of our journey, the officially announced death toll here in Japan was at 4,400 people, including people officially declared 'missing'. However, it is widely said that the whereabouts of tens of thousands are as yet unknown.  
Aftershocks are still very frequent - we had 47 aftershocks just in the morning on the day we set out. The aftershocks only add to the tension and fear of the refugees.  

In Sendai, the scarcity of food and drink seems the most prominent problem - simply because the supermarkets and convenience stores are all out of stock.  

We brought with us some rice balls, cookies, popcorn and water bottles from our Tokyo center

We distributed everything we brought along with us in the nice park located in the Sendai City's downtown district. In this warm and quiet park, many refugees had gathered and were spending their third day here.

Two high-school boys, who came from the neighboring prefecture of Iwate, told us they had been visiting a college in Sendai for an open-campus day when the earthquake struck. One boy said his family in Iwate was found and they are all fine. The other boy said his house in Iwate was 'washed away' by the tsunami. I did not have the heart to ask him how his parents were, feeling that he was already hinting me about it with his eyes. There has been no public transportation to Iwate, or any other place, since then, and the boys were trapped here - washing their bodies in the park's water tap.

There were quite a few elderly people who were sitting all alone. One young couple huddled very closely together on a bench initially did not want to take the food packets we offered, saying, "We are less unfortunate, at least having had something to eat ourselves. So please give it to other people who are more in need."

When we told them, "Don't worry about that, we came all the way from Tokyo just to do this - please take this!" their faces lit up with smile and they took the packets and thanked us.

The people who do not have any place to go are easily recognizable - they are the ones who have only one or two bags with them, overstuffed with many things. The sudden change that has come upon their lives is obvious in every aspect of their appearance and their belongings.

From the expressions of those who accepted our packets, we can see that they are really grateful for any gesture of support. The level of gratitude they expressed makes it all the more clear that food for the refugees is really an urgent need.

All three of us were busy distributing the food so we were not able to take photos of the food distribution. However, those sad faces and the following smiles were recorded deep in our hearts.

On our way back, we came across an elderly woman of 78 years who has a house and workshop four kilometers away from the seashore in Sendai. The house was half-collapsed by the tsunami. 
She had actually been a victim of magnitude 7.4 Miyagi Earthquake in 1978, when the same house was severely damaged. This time, the water came up above her knees, but she dashed out and managed to drive to safety. Now she had come back to see what was left of her house.
Nearby, on the other side of the raised-up roadway, is what is referred to as the "unsearched area."  
Neighbors told us that the area is still covered deeply by tsunami mud, and the search for houses and people has not yet begun.  
While we were there, the National Defense Force officer came by for the first time there, and started an inspection, trying to clear away the blockages leading to the unsearched area.  
Spring usually comes late to this Northeastern Region, and we could see nearby mountains still lightly covered with the snow.  
Three kilometers from seashore, we met one young man and young woman. The man told us that his house was 'washed away.' The ground floor of the woman's house is filled up with mud; all she had left were only a couple of changes of clothes.
Scenes of total destruction like this are commonplace in the area.  
Paddy fields and roads (unseen) are still covered with mud and objects large and small that had been carried by the tsunami.  


On the way back to Tokyo, we took a detour route for 680 kilometers, in order to avoid passing again near the Fukushima nuclear power plant, the fate of which had become much more uncertain during our stay in Sendai.

We were also able to visit some of Amma's volunteers and we are happy to confirm that they are doing all right in spite of these hardships.

- Amritesh

Embracing the World is now accepting donations for the Japan Relief Project. 

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Amma's charities worldwide are now known collectively as Embracing the World.  To find out more click here to visit the Embracing the World website.

 

 
 

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