Executive by darmansjah
At 2.46pm, Japan Standard Time, on the 11th of
March 2011, the ground shook and the ocean reared up as a magnituted 9.0 earthquake and resultant tsunami tore across the
north-eastern coast of Japan’s Honshu island. In Tohoku, already less-visited than her more glamorous sister-regions
in southern Honshu and north in Hokkaido, the nuclear emergency was one more
setback that set the tourism economy reeling. The ripple effect from the disaster
was only just beginning.
More than 6,000 kilometers away in Singapore, watching the
tragedy unfold, was 22-year-old Singapore Management University student Yee
Jiun Hee, being so far away, he was not sure how else he could help beyond the
cursory monetary donations.
His chance to do a little more came in August 2011, less
than six months after the disaster when he applied for a seat on the Singapore
Youth Ambassador for Tohoku Project. Organized by the Japan National Tourism
(JNTO), the project aimed to bring 100 Singapore university students right to
the heart of Tohoku Japan, the epicenter of the tragedy. Their role as
ambassadors was to bring home the message that Japan was on her feet,
rebuilding and that it was safe for visitors.
Over six days, Jiun Hee and his peers saw firsthand the
rebuilding of the affected areas, volunteered in the clean-up efforts, made new friends, participated in Tohoku’s
famously colorful summer festivals and got a dose of Japanese culture for good
measure.
The Youth Ambassador to Tohoku trip coincided with the
famous Sendai Tanabata Festival. Despite the grim reality of destruction and
on-going re-construction efforts, the Japanese decided to go ahead with the
Tanabata Festival, known to be one of the highlights in the summer festival
circuits in Japan. In addition to having iconic floral balls and
beautifully-presented paper decorations line the streets as well as colorful
street parade, the Tanabata Festival
is traditionally a time when good wishes are written on slips of paper, pinned
to willow and hung all over the city. Needless to say, the students left many
hand-written heartfelt wishes for Tohoku’s speedy recovery!
So while the tsunami swept away many bridges, and destroyed
many lives, a hundred new bridges were formed by the Youth Ambassador for
Tohoku Project, with these students building a foundation of hope, friendship
and understanding that would take more than a tsunami to shake.
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