Bangkok Post

ACTOR’S EFFORTS TO HELP JAPAN’S 3/11 VICTIMS

Ken Watanabe has put 10 years into comforting survivors of the disaster. By May Masangkay

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When northeast Japan marks the 10th anniversar­y of the megaquake and tsunami that hit the region on March 11, 2011, triggering a subsequent nuclear disaster, actor Ken Watanabe, despite a decadelong effort to meet survivors to offer solace and encouragem­ent, doesn’t intend to be anywhere in sight.

But wherever he finds himself that day, when he says the spotlight should be on the victims, it will mark only a brief stepping back from what he has come to feel is “a lifetime’s work”.

Speaking to Kyodo News, the 61-year-old star of Hollywood blockbuste­rs such as The Last Samurai and Inception said he reckons he has “personally met and talked to several tens of thousands” of survivors across the region from the immediate aftermath of the disaster to the present day as they seek to rebuild their lives.

With his interactio­ns tending to focus in recent years on the city of Kesennuma, he says that when asked what his hobby is, he names the coastal community of some 60,000 people, one of the hardest hit by the disaster.

“It’s not as simple as liking it,” he adds with a smile of his encounters with residents of the Miyagi Prefecture city, some of whom he now calls friends. “It’s something much deeper. But if I didn’t enjoy it, it wouldn’t be my hobby, right?”

When the earthquake’s first tremors were felt, Watanabe was on a plane returning from the United States. Within weeks, however, he was visiting evacuation shelters.

“I was driven by this will to do something” after seeing footage of the terrible damage wrought by the disaster when he touched down back in Japan, he recalls.

One of the encounters etched most strongly in his memory is meeting a man who gave the appearance of having his feelings under control at first, but who Watanabe later learned had lost his daughters.

The man broke down in tears only when he returned to comfort him. “I just had to embrace what they were going through together with them ... I talked to them, hugged them. In my own little way, I hope I was able to provide solace,” said Watanabe, who was nominated for an Oscar for 2003’s The Last Samurai.

Other actions he took in the immediate aftermath of the disaster included launching the Unite for Japan website to solicit donations and rallying other celebritie­s, including US actor Leonardo DiCaprio, with whom he starred in 2010’s Inception, to post supportive messages on a website he establishe­d called “kizuna311”.

Watanabe remembered how residents he spoke to in those early days would tell him of their anxiety of being eventually forgotten. So he surprised them when he visited the exact same places the next year — and then kept travelling to the region.

He opened a cafe in Kesennuma, which saw many of its buildings inundated or swept away in the tsunami, near the harbour some seven and a half years ago after learning from the local community that they had “lost a place where people could gather and have fun.”

Called K-port, it also serves as an event space and gallery, and its logo bears an image of a lighthouse forming part of the letter K. The light emanating from the lighthouse is symbolic of the darkness that gripped Kesennuma, Watanabe says. A month or so after the disaster, the city still had “no streetligh­ts” and was “absolutely dark with hardly any sound”.

With the actor often under the spotlight, it was a place where he felt he could strip that public part of him away and simply relax. Now unable to visit, he maintains his link with K-port with faxed daily handwritte­n messages on his thoughts for the day. “It takes five minutes to write it, and during that time, I am thinking about Kesennuma. It’s my way of saying I am connected to them,” he said.

The culture of “kizuna” — the Japanese word for bonds between people or emotional ties — is close to Watanabe’s heart. In addition to using the word in the name of the website he set up right after the disaster, he also spoke about kizuna at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, in 2012.

But it’s not something that can be taken for granted, he says, recalling a recent meeting with young people in Kamaishi, Iwate Prefecture, another disaster-hit area, and the feelings they expressed 10 years after the disaster.

“These young people were in junior or high school when they experience­d the disaster. They experience­d the spirit of compassion and caring with people around them and overcoming the hardship together. But as time goes on and the town slowly rebuilds or revives, the compassion felt then, the spirit of supporting each other is gradually fading,” he said.

That makes the upcoming anniversar­y an important time to recall the strength and resilience people drew from the culture of kizuna.

“Looking back on the 10 years, this is just the time to remember how we supported each other and how we had gone past those times,” Watanabe said. But when the 10th-anniversar­y remembranc­es take place, Watanabe says, he will be somewhere away from the spotlight, praying quietly.

 ??  ?? COMFORTS OF HOME: Sally Hawkins, left, and Ken Watanabe in a scene from ‘Godzilla: King of the Monsters.’
COMFORTS OF HOME: Sally Hawkins, left, and Ken Watanabe in a scene from ‘Godzilla: King of the Monsters.’

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