snapes_mistress: (Default)
snapes_mistress ([personal profile] snapes_mistress) wrote2011-05-19 01:43 pm

Onagawa, a town pretty much swept off the map.

During my first trip to Tohoku with the tsunami-relief group, we drove into the coastal town of Onagawa. After working in Ishinomaki all day, seeing the destruction there, I wondered how it could possibly get any worse. Needless to say, it did.

Onagawa is a city nestled in a kind of valley, in an inlet on the coast. (Forgive me if I'm getting my earth science terms wrong, ha ha.) Because of the way the mountains sit, the tsunami hit the city even harder than most other places. I'd say the water was 6 to 8 stories high.

The word that comes to mind when walking around Onagawa now is "Necropolis." Complete and utter destruction. No one lives there any more. There is nothing our group can do to help. All that can be done is to dynamite what is left, and rebuild anew. IF anyone even wants to rebuild.

Because of the location's geography, the water was condensed in a rather small area. As we drove through, everything looked perfectly normal at first. Then we rounded a corner, and there was just... nothing. Nothing but twisted metal and busted concrete. 4-story concrete apartment buildings had been pushed over, their foundations still attached. All that was left of homes were a few floor tiles which managed to hang on.

There is a hospital on a high hill. I'd say the hill was about 5 stories high. This was supposed to the the town's evacuation spot during a tsunami warning. However, the water came in so fast and so high that even this spot wasn't safe. The first floor of the hospital was washed out. Only people who lived on, or ran to, even higher ground survived. I stood in the parking lot of that hospital, looking out on the lovely, calm sea, and wondering how in the hell that beautiful water could do what it did.

It was the worst thing I have ever seen in my life, but, though it sounds strange, I'm glad I had the chance to see it. It was mind-blowing, perception-altering, and well... cliche as this sounds, it was life-changing. I truly appreciate everything and everyone in my life now. Don't sweat the small stuff, guys. Take care of your loved ones while you can.




This building was 3 or 4 stories high. Cars on top of buildings became a normal sight after a while.

Photobucket




Photobucket



Photobucket



Photobucket




Unlike in Ishinomaki, where people's belongings were scattered everywhere, this was one of the few personal things I saw in Onagawa. Everything was totally washed away.

Photobucket





Japanese military truck.

Photobucket




Photobucket





Photobucket




Photobucket




Photobucket




Photobucket




Someone's bathroom floor; all that is left of their home.

Photobucket




Photobucket





Photobucket





Photobucket




Photobucket




You are looking at the ROOF of this building.

Photobucket



Photobucket




View from the hospital parking lot.

Photobucket






Photobucket



Another building pushed over. The green part is the roof.

Photobucket



Photobucket



Photobucket




Photobucket




Photobucket



Photobucket



Photobucket



Ganbare, ganbare, Tohoku.

Photobucket

Post a comment in response:

This account has disabled anonymous posting.
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting