Herald on Sunday

A birthday Pita Alatini will never forget

When Kamaishi was devastated by the deadly 2011 tsunami, Pita Alatini and his team-mates at the local rugby club pitched in to help their community, writes David Skipwith

- Tsunami hero

Former All Black star Pita Alatini will never forget his 35th birthday. March 11, 2011, is etched in his mind as the day a routine rugby medical likely saved him from the magnitude 9.0 earthquake and giant tsunami that devastated the small Japanese coastal town of Kamaishi.

The worst natural disaster to hit Japan in decades claimed the lives of almost 1200 Kamaishi locals after the initial 10m-high wave swamped the breakwater designed to protect them, engulfing the town and surroundin­g areas.

Alatini, a veteran of 17 tests for New Zealand (1999-2001) and then captain of the second division Kamaishi Seawaves, would have been caught in the thick of it while celebratin­g his birthday, if not for the inconvenie­nce of an annual physical.

“I was at the hospital waiting to get my medical,” says Alatini.

“I was there for a long time and it was my birthday and usually we’d go to lunch in town, so I was hoping to get in and out.

“Being really late saved me from being amongst it all where the tsunami happened.

“When it hit, I was back at our apartment with my family, so I was really lucky with the timing.”

Kamaishi is a rugby town. It’s also the birthplace of Japan’s modern steel industry. Situated on the Sanriku Coast, fishing remains the region’s other big drawcard.

Under the banner of Nippon Steel, the town’s original rugby team won seven consecutiv­e titles from 1979 to 1985, a streak that saw them dubbed Kita no

Tetsujin — Iron Men of the North. That unyielding reputation would be put to the test on Alatini’s birthday, when the most powerful quake ever recorded in Japan struck offshore at 2.46pm.

The undersea megathrust launched a wall of water that arrived on Kamaishi’s doorstep 35 minutes later.

Living almost 8km inland, the severity of the situation was not immediatel­y apparent to Alatini, his wife Megan, her mother Barbara Kirchner, and their two youngest children Tiara, 7, and Trey, 6.

“There wasn’t too much damage around our apartment,” he said. “But when the Japanese people started running, we went to an evacuation assembly area.

“Within the hour, we had [Seawaves] players who work in town come back and say ‘the town is under water’.”

Kamaishi’s town centre had been completely flooded. The raging water shunted everything in its path — ships, fishing boats, trucks, cars — around like Matchbox toys.

With a population of around 38,000, reported estimates had 30 per cent of Kamaishi homes damaged or destroyed, and 60 per cent of businesses submerged.

In the wake of the disaster, the Seawaves clubrooms and playing field became a refuge.

With communicat­ions down and no power, rugby club members and locals set up camp, gathering food, water and medical supplies.

“We were all in shock throughout that first day,” says Alatini.

“The next day, we started having to think around the space of survival, in terms of food and all of the families, planning what to do next.

“As long as we worked together in terms of rationing, to make sure the families and kids were getting looked after, we felt we had about a month’s worth of supplies.”

Alatini’s Seawaves teammates all survived but some club staff, their family and friends were still missing.

The group eventually learned many of their loved ones had arrived safely at another assembly point but some at the Seawaves base were already mourning.

“A few old boys lost their parents right in town. We also had a girl missing that worked in the Seawaves office. She passed away.

“That was quite scary

because we [also] had a translator with us and she couldn’t get to the town where her kids and mother and father were.

“We had to console her through that tough time. Her kids were lucky enough to survive but her parents didn’t.”

With supply lines cut off, the possibilit­y of aftershock­s, and the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant deteriorat­ing, leaving Kamaishi seemed wise to anyone who had somewhere else to go.

Foreign embassy representa­tives arrived, encouragin­g visitors to get out while they could.

Some didn’t need to be told twice but Alatini and his good mate, former Wallaby forward Scott Fardy, had other ideas.

“Scott was adamant he wanted to stay and I felt the same way,” says Alatini.

“We had a lot of good friends and there were a lot of good people that had helped us during our stay.

“We had homes in New Zealand and Australia, and in their time of need, we couldn’t just up and leave.

“Just to be there for our mates, and also their families and friends, was really important.

“We talk about rugby being a brotherhoo­d and family, and having each other’s backs, and that really came through with us. That’s the beauty of rugby.”

Sending his family home to New Zealand without him was one of the toughest decisions Alatini has faced.

“At first they were like, ‘no way — we all come back or we all stay’.

“The kids were sad but they understood, knowing they had grown up there and it was their home. [Megan] knew, too, that me staying was representi­ng us as a family.

“It didn’t really hit me until they all got in the van and left, and I was like ‘oh, have I done the right thing?’ But in my heart, I knew it was.”

Over the next three weeks, Alatini and Fardy, together with Seawaves coach and fellow Kiwi Paul Hodder, and Tongan players Lata Lui and Piei Mafile’o, stayed in camp, preparing meals for those in need.

“Back home, we’d all had big family feasts with hangi and umu and we knew how to serve a lot of people. Lata had started training to be a chef, so he directed us. We just kept to soups and added noodles.”

Once the muddy waters had subsided, relief supplies began arriving in town.

Alatini’s group volunteere­d their collective muscle to unload military trucks and walk 16km roundtrips delivering goods to isolated communitie­s.

“Once we saw the state of the town, we knew we were in a bit of strife, and there was going to be some much-needed work to get people back into normal life.

“Cars were still stacked on top of each other from where they had washed up but it was safe enough for us to get through.

“The hours were long and it was physical work but we were used to that, and that’s where we felt we could really be of help.”

Four weeks after the tsunami and with basic infrastruc­ture barely in place, a community meeting decided the rugby players needed to get back to doing what they do best.

The new rugby season was fast approachin­g and Kamaishi’s Iron Men were not about to forfeit.

“The message that came back to us is that the town needs rugby to carry on. That’s what they were pinning their hopes on.

“We were taken aback by that. That again just shows how powerful rugby or sport can be as a vehicle to life.”

After a brief visit to Auckland to reunite with family, Alatini and the Seawaves resumed training in Kamaishi, while the recovery effort continued around them.

“Our rugby field was still being used as an air field by helicopter­s delivering supplies or taking people to hospital, so the reality of what was still going on was right there.

“But we could feel the love of the people, and a big part of that was because of what the rugby club had done, with us players being at the relief centre.”

The whole experience and the resilience of the Kamaishi people had a lasting impact on Alatini, now an assistant coach with Tonga and director of rugby and backs coach with Auckland Premier club side Pakuranga.

“Sure [it changed me]. I’ve always known not to take life for granted but that really hit home.

“The townspeopl­e were the main thing for me, to have those friendship­s and relationsh­ips, that stuck with me for a long time.

“Seeing them down but not out, thankful for life, was another thing. There was huge impact just in that.

“If was easy enough for us to just get up and go, because we had a life and people outside of this. But for the locals, it was around how they were going to rebuild their lives. That was huge in terms of going forward after leaving the place.”

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 ?? Photo / AP Photo / Brett Phibbs ?? Pita Alatini and his Kamaishi Seawaves teammates stayed on to help out in the weeks after their coastal town was submerged.
Photo / AP Photo / Brett Phibbs Pita Alatini and his Kamaishi Seawaves teammates stayed on to help out in the weeks after their coastal town was submerged.
 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? The Kamaishi Recovery Memorial Stadium was built on the site of two schools which have been moved to higher ground.
Photo / Getty Images The Kamaishi Recovery Memorial Stadium was built on the site of two schools which have been moved to higher ground.

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