The Star Malaysia

Soothing lost souls with song at Suicide Forest

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Narusawa: From his hut on the edge of Japan’s “Suicide Forest”, Kyochi Watanabe blasts John Lennon’s Imagine into the night – hoping that music can lift people from their despair before it’s too late.

The 60-year-old musician has been waging an eight-year battle to banish the vast forest’s morbid reputation by reaching out to those who come to end their lives.

But now he fears his work is being undone.

The forest, known as Aokigahara, made global headlines last year when YouTube star Logan Paul filmed an episode of his online series there, showing a suicide victim at the site.

The footage sparked outrage and infuriated Watanabe, who was born nearby and has spent most of his life in and around the forest.

“It’s a forest of nature. It’s a forest of religion. It’s not that kind of place,” he said.

“Do people want to make this forest a hell?” he said, calling it “so painful” to see the woods depicted in such a grim fashion.

Watanabe now lives in a hut on the edge of Aokigahara, which means “a field of blue trees”.

As night falls, he flips on speakers outside his secluded home and blasts rock and hip-hop into the darkness, breaking the thick silence of the ocean of trees.

He believes music is a way to reach people engulfed in inner turmoil, and describes seeing people turn around and leave the forest when they hear the blasting tunes.

Sometimes he plays guitar and sings his favourite songs into a microphone to break the silence.

He has even intervened directly, convincing one man who had travelled from the western city of Osaka to go home.

“He returned home, and he still sends me messages on Facebook,” he said.

Aokigahara’s long history dates back to the middle of the ninth century, when Mount Fuji erupted and lava covered wide areas that have since transforme­d into a 30sq km forest.

Local people have long worshipped the woods and its sur- roundings as a sacred place that reputedly enshrines a dragon.

It is a foreboding place, thickly planted with tall trees that block out the sun, and carpeted with moss and gnarled roots.

That led in the 1970s to it being increasing­ly depicted in popular novels, movies and television dramas as the fictional setting for suicides.

The associatio­n eventually became strong enough that suicidal people began travelling to the forest to die.

Authoritie­s no longer give official figures for suicides in the forest, but at one time dozens of people were dying there each year.

A sign at the entrance reads: “Life is a precious thing given by your parents. Think again calmly about your parents, siblings and children. Do not worry alone. First talk to us” and gives a hotline number to call.

Japan has the highest suicide rate of any Group of Seven industrial­ised nation, with more than 20,000 people taking their own lives annually.

In recent years, local residents say, the number of victims appeared to be on the decline, with some hoping the forest might finally shed its malign image.

But that hope was shattered when Paul uploaded his controvers­ial film showing the body of a man who had committed suicide. The video attracted six million views before it was deleted.

He has since apologised. “The first wave of notoriety was created by mass media decades ago and now we are facing a second wave created by social media,” Watanabe said.

Paul’s footage was not the only factor – a steady stream of sometimes sensationa­list news reports, and a 2015 film about two men coming to the forest to kill themselves – have cemented the place’s morbid reputation in recent years.

Watanabe knows he faces an uphill struggle, but says he is committed to his campaign.

“Because I was born here, I have to protect this place,” he says.

“I’m a gatekeeper. I feel it’s like my duty.” — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? Sweet serenade: Watanabe playing his guitar at the entrance of Aokigahara Forest, or Suicide Forest, in Narusawa village.
— AFP Sweet serenade: Watanabe playing his guitar at the entrance of Aokigahara Forest, or Suicide Forest, in Narusawa village.

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