Bangkok Post

1995 Kobe quake memorial returns to pre-Covid scale

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KOBE: The western Japan city of Kobe yesterday marked the 28th anniversar­y of the magnitude 7.3 earthquake that took 6,434 lives, with its first ceremony in three years at a pre-pandemic scale.

Residents and victims’ families observed a moment of silence at 5.46am, the same time the Great Hanshin Earthquake struck the port city in Hyogo Prefecture and neighbouri­ng areas on Jan 17, 1995.

The ceremony, which came after memorials were reduced in scale or cancelled in 2021 and 2022, saw participan­ts light thousands of candles forming “1.17, 1995,” the date of the disaster, and this year’s message, musubu, meaning “to be bound together”.

Under pandemic limits, commemorat­ions at Higashi Yuenchi, a park in Kobe’s Chuo Ward, had used around half the number of candles at a normalscal­e event. This year’s pre-dawn event saw some 10,000 bamboo and paper lanterns lit to mark the anniversar­y.

Masashi Ueno, who lost his 20-yearold daughter Shino in the quake, spoke at the park on behalf of the victims’ relatives. Reflecting on the pain of Shino’s death at the very start of her adult life and the shock of finding her body, Mr Ueno said, “We must make use of the lessons learned from the disaster.”

Others like Noriko Morisaki, 55, attended local events such as a memorial event held by residents in Kobe’s Nagata district, where more than 900 people died in the disaster. “I’ve been waiting for today because, with the coronaviru­s, there weren’t any memorial events,” she said.

Elsewhere, Kiyoko Takeuchi, 50, whose parents’ home in Kobe’s Kita district was affected by the disaster, said she had come to pray “with feelings of admiration for how people here have rebuilt their lives.”

With nearly 30 years passed since the quake struck and the scaling down of memorial activities in recent years, the city and residents face increasing challenges in passing on the memory and lessons learned from the disaster to future generation­s.

Noting that an increasing number of residents were not born when the earthquake struck, Kobe Mayor Kizo Hisamoto said the city will work to “ensure the experience­s and lessons of the quake do not fade” and that they are also passed on to the next generation and those that follow.

The earthquake was the first in the country to measure at the maximum of 7 on Japan’s seismic intensity scale, which the country’s weather agency says would make it impossible to remain standing or move without crawling.

The powerful quake damaged around 640,000 homes, including about 104,000 that were destroyed.

In addition to the 6,434 killed in the disaster, the quake injured around 44,000 others and forced as many as 310,000 people to evacuate to emergency shelters.

 ?? AFP ?? People take part in a memorial service to mark the 28th anniversar­y of the Great Hanshin Earthquake which devastated the city of Kobe, at Higashi Yuenchi Park in Kobe, Hyogo prefecture yesterday.
AFP People take part in a memorial service to mark the 28th anniversar­y of the Great Hanshin Earthquake which devastated the city of Kobe, at Higashi Yuenchi Park in Kobe, Hyogo prefecture yesterday.

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