voices-2
["God's Door Opened!"]
- I was driving on the highway when I suddenly saw a bright mass of light
coming from the southwest; it swept right through me, toward Rokko. I've
never seen anything so intense. When the light passed through I felt
transparent.
- I ran outside the instant it struck. The sky was red. I thought it was
dawn. Then it was suddenly pitch black again.
It was the religious leader Wanisaburo Deguchi who said that "Kobe" means
"God's Door." Many who didn't even know that were heard to say, "God's door opened!"
-
The stars couldn't have been more beautiful. Even with the full moon that
night, the sky was filled with bright stars. I knew then that those who had
been buried by the quake had become those stars.
[Chuo Ward resident whose family was buried in the quake]
- The moon on the 17th was definitely red. Everyone says so.
[Residents of Higashi-Nada]
Experiencing the great force of Nature, people were filled with mystical,
extraordinary emotions.
- Claims that the earthquake was triggered by the construction of the Akashi
Bridge have proved to be false.
[A government statement ]
The City of Kobe convened a press conference to deny a belief many
people shared that the quake was the result of the construction work for the
Akashi Bridge, one of whose ends lie near the epicenter.
- See, Kobe's been punished for the way we've been living.
- If the quake had happened two hours later, at 7:45 instead of 5:45, the death
toll would have been 500,000 instead of 5,000. I'm not saying 5,000 is a
small number. But I am saying that the quake warned us. It chose that time.
If we do not heed its lesson, all those lost lives will have been wasted.
[A volunteer in Hyogo Ward]
voices-3
[Water-Fetching Days]
- I wonder what all the exhiliration was about?
- I was in the water queue and spoke with the guy living next door to me in my
condo. It was the first time we'd ever spoken to each other. He was very
nice, and I had to wonder why we'd never spoken before.
- While I was in the line for water, I realized for the first time that there
were people from the Philippines, India, Peru and Canada, all living
in the same complex.
At every condo and apartment complex, people were meeting for the first time, digging out bodies, helping one another. What would the next chapter in
their stories be?
- I really regret buying that washing machine. That guzzler consumes 80 liters
a cycle. That's four trips with a 20-liter plastic container.
- A 75-year-old physician died of a heart attack while climbing the staircase
to his 11th floor condominium. He was carrying water.
[Article in the Kobe Shimbun]
- The entire city has turned into an ashram. Most people think an ashram is
some sort of Indian yoga school. Actually, it's a place where people learn what it is to be human, where they perform difficult but essential tasks like fetching water. Even rich people with servants spend time each year in an ashram so as to never forget what it is to be human.
[A musician who returned to Kobe from India]
- I made friends for the first time with the Self-Defense Forces. Their sign
said "SDF Shower Platoon."
- When those dusty green tanks came in to the schoolyard I was convinced it was a coup. "They've done it at last!" I thought. But then they put up tents
for people to take baths. One time I was in a tub, and a young woman called
out, "How is it? Not too hot, I hope." They should do this bath service all
over the world.
- The yakuza [Japanese gangsters] were the first to come in and set up bath
services. They were followed by the religious cultists. You know, that guy
who claims to be the Buddha himself. They put up banners and flags and
baths. It was a tough choice. I stood there for quite a while unable to
choose, wondering which bath would lead to salvation.
The quick response and efficient delivery of much-needed goods by the
Yamaguchi Gumi yakuza group received coverage in the international press. But that only
lasted a short while, and then they were gone. The Vietnamese in tents in
Koma Park in Nagata Ward were frightened by rumors of a coup d'etat led by
the Self-Defense Forces. In March, a huge banner was set up across a major
pedestrian walkway. It read, "We thank you, SDF." But it was gone within a
few days, and it still remains a mystery as to who put it up and who took it
down.
- The water-supply trucks were from Fukuoka. Then one day they stopped coming and were replaced by trucks from Suginami Ward in Tokyo. It made us all wonder where all that water was coming from.
- I only began to seriously think about the water I drink once it stopped
coming out of the tap.
- Caution: Do not use the drains in your home. The municipal sewage system is
still cut off.
[Notice at a Port Island apartment complex]
- Before your bowel movements, spread a newspaper over the toilet. Wrap the feces and take them to the waste disposal site afterwards.
[Sign in civic hall bathroom]
- Corrugated cardboard boxes, if you know how, make good toilets. Did you know
that?
- We tried the EM liquid. It took care of the odor nicely. I was impressed.
- Please sprinkle EM solution after use.
[Sign in Higashi-Nada Ward temporary toilet]
"EM" stands for "Effective Microbes," and was popular for some time among
livestock farmers. It was used as a toilet deodorant in the most heavily
damaged areas of Kobe. It creates an odor resembling ripe fruit.
- Whenever I'm in Osaka and I see high-school girls merrily flushing the toilet
without a care in the world, I want to go up to them and shout, "Don't you
know what you're doing?!" They should try carrying all that water they're
flushing sometime.
[A housewife in Chuo Ward]
- The problem goes back to our having only a single water supply system that
mixes water from different sources. The Rokko area has enough water to supply the entire city. That could account for the drinking water system. Then the water from Lake Biwa and the Yodo River catchment could form a second system for household usage, in other words, for washing and toilets. This way, too, we wouldn't have to use too much chlorine. The Rokko water is fairly clean, so that would require minimal disinfecting. The Yodo water wouldn't be used for drinking, so again we wouldn't need much chlorination. And, too, with two systems, we'd always have one to rely on if the other broke down for some reason. We have an excellent opportunity to restructure our entire water supply system, but no one is paying any attention. What's more, people are buying bottled water for both drinking and cooking because the quality of the tap water is low. That's not right.
[A local assembly member]
-
Once the water supply returned, people stopped talking to each other. It's
like we all returned to our plastic capsules.
[A housewife in Nishinomiya]
- Maybe they should turn off the water supply for a week every year beginning
on January 17. Turning off the traffic lights might be an idea too, but I
suppose that'd be too dangerous.
[A taxi driver in Nada Ward]
Discussion about a one-minute "lights out" on the anniversary of the quake
is going on. A one-week "Water Out" would probably be more effective to make
people remember and to "Replay the Big One."
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[Tsumura Interview on the Quake's Aftermath Part 2]
[map page of sensing Japan]
The theme of sensorium and texts that relate to sensing Japan are in the library of the linked senses. If you are interested in these texts (some are rather long), please click the text icon or the name of the text.
["earth" A Sensibility for Living in a World in Constant Flux by Shin'ichi Takemura]
["earth" From Kobe to the World by Takashi Tsumura]
Theme pavilion "sensorium" (sensorium home page)
INTERNET 1996 WORLD EXPOSITION (World Public Park) / JAPAN (Japan EXPO home page)