“World Tsunami Awareness Day,” designated on November 5th, is connected with the events that followed the Ansei Earthquake in 1854, when a great tsunami overtook Wakayama Prefecture's Hiromura Village (present day Hirogawa Town). During the disaster, Goryo Hamaguchi lit fire to sheaves of rice in an effort to alert those who had not started running upland to safety, saving their lives in the process. On a proposal by Japan, the United Nations General Assembly unanimously designated November 5th as “World Tsunami Awareness Day.” At Inamura-no-Hi no Yakata, we will continue to spread the story of “the Fire of Rice Sheaves,” in an effort to ensure absolutely zero victims from tsunami disasters.
Selected Papers No.23(p.10)
Ocean Newsletter
No.414 November 5, 2017
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The Fire of Rice Sheaves and its Connection to World Tsunami Awareness Day
Koichi SAKIYAMADirector, Inamura-no-Hi no Yakata / Selected Papers No.23(p.10)
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Towards the Establishment of a Comprehensive Base for Wind-generated Power Industries —The “Green Energy Port Hibiki” Project—
Takayuki SUYAMAHead, “Green Energy Port” Project Division, Kitakyushu Seaport and Airport Bureau
Kitakyushu City began soliciting contractors for the establishment and running of a large-scale offshore windfarm last summer as the second phase of its “Green Energy Port Hibiki” project, which began in 2010. This was the first such case to be conducted in line with the reformed Port and Harbor Act. With momentum from this project, we look to further accelerate the accumulation of industries relating to wind-power generation.
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The Rise and Fall of Coral Based Okinawa Plaster Making —Centered Around Okinawa's Ishigaki Island—
Naoko FUKAYAMAAssociate Professor, Social Anthropology Studies, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Tokyo Metropolitan University
In Okinawa, despite the urgent issue of coral conservation, the history concerning the direct use of coral has begun to be forgotten. On Ishigaki Island however, traditional artisans from days past remember in detail the process of painting tiled roofs with plaster made from coral they gathered from the sea.