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GyG1345
03-03-03, 02:45 PM
From: JPageSpann@aol.com | This is Spam | Add to Address Book
Date: Sun, 2 Mar 2003 10:20:20 EST
Subject: #154 Richard Keech We Make it to Hiroshima
To:

#154 Newsletter March 2, 2003
©copyright 2003 by Richard Keech

Editor's note: Richard's back surgery will be
someday this month. Of course
he will not know when until they wake him up in
the middle of the night, put
him in chains and take him to the hospital. I
gather that once there,
accompanied by 2 armed guards, his wife will be
notified so the immediate
family can visit him.

WE MAKE IT TO HIROSHIMA

To an American, distances in Japan are deceptive.
I grew up in California
during the early twentieth century. I grew up in
a world designed around the
American love of cars. All families had cars
and loved to go places in
them. Distances were measured as a function of
their driving time.

"Nearby", as a distance, would be any place
reachable by a Sunday drive,
(about 30 miles.)

"Not too far" would be the distance a family car
could travel on a spring
vacation, (about a thousand miles.)

Only places like New York that you couldnt drive
to, were considered really
"distant."

This concept of distance doesn't work in Japan.
In Japan everything is
plannned around a "days walking distance." (A
plan that was developed a
millennia back.)

Villages are situated so that the villagers can
walk to their fields, and
still get in a days work. Farm lands farther
than that will be served by
neighboring villages.

This places these unique little villages about a
days walk apart. (Say 10
miles.)

The life of a Japanese rice farmer is a hard one.
He works from dawn to dark
seven days a week.

He is happy to make it home to his village by
nightfall. He won't be
traveling far from there if he can help it.

Thus Japanese villages are unique entities in
themselves. Each is different
and special. That neighboring village, just ten
miles down the road, is as
distant to the people of this village as New York
was to me, as a boy.

Of course we're in modern Japan now. But the
thing is the people still live
in the same small villages they grew up in. The
only change for most is they
ride bicycles now instead of walking.

Our train is traveling across the island of
Kyushu, (about the size of Orange
county in California.)

Our trip to Mogi cannot be too many miles. But it
does take time.

Our train passes through village after village,
stopping at times at small
stations. We are not riding a "local" that would
stop at every station , But
we are not riding an express either. We do stop
at quite a few.

I love the scenery thru this part of Kyushus. We
have been passing through
Bamboo forests. My favorite forest of all. Such
tall, beautiful, lacy green
giants. This type of bamboo is called "running
bamboo". It sends out runners
from its base and builds its own forest, one new
shoot at a time.

This bamboo is used in all sorts of construction.
I don't know, but suspect
that these forests are cash crops. I do know
that the new bamboo shoots are
harvested when they reach about a foot above the
ground. (They grow three
inches a day.) They are tender and edible at
this stage.

In the meantime the train has pulled into another
small station. Kay, wno nas
been enjoyoing the scene as much as I, turns to
me and says "Where do all
those bicycles come from?"

She has noticed something very special about
Japanese train stations. In
front of each station is a small parking lot. It
is divided into narrow
aisles by what look like picket fences. They're
bicycle parking racks. They
are filled with bicycles. Thousands of them.

The modern Japanese worker now toils in some
great electronics plant in one
of the major cities. To get there he rides a
bicycle to the nearest train
station, parks his bike in one of the free
parking lot bike racks, then takes
a train to his workplace city. There a factory
bus will pick him up and
take him on to his job site.

At night he will retrieve his bike from the rack
at his home station and
ride it on home.

A bit complicated but the beauty of this is he
can continue to live in his
country village. (So much better than moving to
overcrowded housing in the
city. Japan does some things quite right.)

Of interest, none of these thousands of bikes is
locked or chained. This is
Japan. There are no thieves.

I have been watching the industrial buildings as
we near Mogi. I would love
to show Kay the open warehouse used by the Army
to sort us out the day we
landed in Japan. (That was 40 years ago. I know
it can't still be there
now.) That scene is still indelibly printed in
my memory tho.

That warehouse was about a hundred feet from the
edge of the dock where our
ship was tied up.

It was cold that day. We had on only the light
tropical cotton we had been
wearing when we boarded the ship 19 days before
in Manila.. ( now tattered
and filthy.) We were freezing cold.

Out on the dock was a mountain of carry on bags,
ours, taken from us when we
boarded the ship. If we could get to our bags in
that great mountain we
would have clothes to change into. A mountain
however, that could take days
to sort out.

Not a problem for the Japanese tho. The last
instruction we were given as
we left that warehouse was,"Go pick up one of
those bags, just one, and don't
try to look for yours. Its all community
property isnt it?" Very Japanese.

We made it work. I remember telling myself, "find
a heavy sea bag that looks
like its weight comes from clothing." I did,
and came away better off than
if I had gotten my own bag..

While I have been reliving these scenes of 40
years ago in my memory the
train has arrived at the Ferry terminal.

We grab our bags and make our way to the upper
deck of the ferry. We dont
want to miss anything.

I do make a last try to redraw the picture for
Kay of that distant time and
place, the warehouse and the soldiers, but it's
too nice a day and she is
enjoying the harbor sights of fishing boats and
sea gulls.

One other picture from long ago does come back to
me as we stand there on the
Ferry. Jimmy, my buddy for the voyage, comes up
to me that morning and says
"I got them to hook up the hoses. Want to take a
bath..?"

My immediate reaction to that was "No way, It's
cold out here" But then I
add, "Why should we?"

Jimmies answer shakes me up. "Because we smell
terrible. Hadn't you noticed?"

CONTINUED........................................

http://www.richard-keech.org/

Richard Keech

Posted on Mar 2, 2003, 4:06 PM
from IP address 24.99.13.138

GyG1345
03-03-03, 02:46 PM
CONTINUES HERE!!!!!

The funny thing is that I hadn't. But, he's
right. Of course, I smell like
hell. 19 days in a stinking hold with 900 men and
no sanitation. Who
wouldn't?

It was damn cold but I reluctanltly stripped and
shivered as I washed. It did
feel good to be clean again.

After the dowsing I opened up my new sea bag and
found some clean dry clothes
that almost fit.

Our Ferry has crossed the channel. We have to
disembark, and quickly. It's
going to turn right around and return. (Passenger
loading time is never
calculated into Japanese transportation
schedules.)

We climb back on a train that looks just like the
one we left. Can't be
though, that one is on the other side of the
channel. We move fast and get a
double seat this time to share. We will still be
climbed over by the happy
little boys who own the world. The coach
passengers are still mostly families.

We settle into our seats and try to politely
decline the frequent offers of
tasty tidbits from the mothers.

As we watch the pleasant activity going on around
us the train pulls into a
station, apparently an important one. Many of our
co-passengers are standing
up preparing to leave.

I look out to see if I can make out the stations
name. I can. The sign says
"Hiroshima". This is where we get off. (For once
the stations name is printed
in readable letters. Probably because Hiroshima
is now a famous site for
foreign tourists.)

I reach up in the overhead rack, retrieve our
luggage, Kay packs the
remaining gift cookies in her handbag and we're
ready to leave.

We make our way out to the front of the station,
slowly. We are in no hurry.
Let our friends dash on ahead to join up with
their families.

We're old hands at this, now. Find a taxi is all
we have to do.

The front of the station clears up quickly and we
are soon spotted by one of
Japans finest, a handsome uniformed taxi driver.
He runs up with arms
outstretched, smiling and reaches for our bags.
Could be a brother of the one
we rode with in Kagoshima.

Its a short ride. Our taxi soon pulls into a
visitors parking space in front
of what looks like a modern three story Hotel.
Built to a "Best Western"
design.

We come into a small reception area with a
typical check-in desk. It leads
onto a large Hostel type day room.. Our check-in
desk is not as mechanized as
a Best Western, but it's staffed with friendly
young people who do speak
english fairly well.

Would you like to take your bags to your room and
freshen up?" The young
Japanese hostel girl asks.

"Yes, thank you very much, could you show it to
us," I answer. (No bell boys
in a youth hostel. You carry your own bags.)

We are taken to a room on the second floor. It
has an American style double
bed, a dresser and a wash stand, (the lavatory is
down the hall. The showers
are by the hot tub.)

"You can leave your bags here. I may have to move
you later
so don't unpack too much. Relax, make yourselves
comfortable,
wash up if you like. Supper is at 7:00 PM. Once
you're rested come down and
join us in the Day Room. Check with me right
after supper. We may have to
move you to a dorm."

We thank her and she leaves.

"May have to move us to a dorm?", she says. No
problem! A dorm is the normal
housing for touring students. Students are
generally not married. Separate
housing for boys and girls is the way hostels are
run. We were lucky to get a
private room at Kagoshima.

We do plan on going to bed early. Tomorrow will
be a busy day.

Hiroshima is world famous as all of you know as
the site of the first atomic
bomb explosion in WW2. Japan has built a memorial
park around the "ground
Zero" of that blast. Tomorrow we will spend the
day exploring that memorial
park and its museum. We won't be alone. This site
is probably the most
visited place in all Japan.

I'll be interested in the story of that fateful
day. Not sure I really want
to expose myself to that much pain and suffering,
but it is a part of our
history.

Not the way one would plan to spend a holiday.
Our spirit of fun and
adventure will have to be subdued for the day.

Oddly enough the hostels reassignment to a dorm
has the effect of setting the
mood for the coming day.

Kay goes to a dorm with 4 girls and I to a male
dorm with 4 guys.

No problem for either of us, other than, in the
girls dorm Kay will spend the
night listening to the heart wrenching sobs of
one of the young girls in a
neighboring bunk. Kay and the other girls try to
comfort her but to no avail.
The unhappy girl is one of the foreign students,
not Japanese. A girl friend
stays by her bunk during the night, but is unable
to calm her. Because of language difference Kay
doesn't find out at the time
what it is that is breaking her heart.

Some how that night of sadness sets the stage for
the next days walk through
the irradiated landscape of Hiroshima's Ground
Zero.
TO BE CONTINUED

Richard Keech
semper fi

http://www.richard-keech.org/

Richard Keech

Posted on Mar 2, 2003, 4:06 PM
from IP address 24