综合一区欧美国产,99国产麻豆免费精品,九九精品黄色录像,亚洲激情青青草,久久亚洲熟妇熟,中文字幕av在线播放,国产一区二区卡,九九久久国产精品,久久精品视频免费

Podcast

Tsunami memories go back to 1933


Updated: 2011-03-22 10:51
Large Medium Small

Get Flash Player

進入英語學習論壇下載音頻  去聽寫專區(qū)一展身手

Teru Suzuki, 86, says only "destiny" kept her alive after this month’s magnitude-9 earthquake triggered the third big tsunami in her lifetime to level her quiet fishing town in northeastern Japan.

Suzuki is one of a handful of elderly people in the area who have rebuilt lives after a magnitude-8.1 quake in 1933, a tsunami from the magnitude-9.5 Chilean earthquake in 1960 and a naval attack in the last days of World War II.

Relaxing in her living room when the latest earthquake struck, she didn't think much of the tsunami warning on television until her son, who had climbed up a hill to check the coast, ran back to tell her that a huge wave was coming.

Hand in hand, they rushed out to the back of the house to climb to higher ground, escaping death from Japan's largest tremor on record.

"I can only think that it was destiny. Three people have died just from around here," Suzuki said, crediting her escape to her son, a truck driver living near Tokyo who happened to be in town for a delivery.

Japan is the most rapidly aging society on earth, and remote, rural areas like Ofunato in hard-hit Iwate prefecture have a disproportionate percentage of elderly people.

Japanese media have carried reports of very elderly people being pulled from shattered homes by their sons or daughters, who are grandparents themselves.

For Suzuki, however, the tsunami generated by the Chilean earthquake thousands of miles across the Pacific Ocean in 1960 was a worse tragedy because it took the life of her eldest son.

Kazuo, 20 years old at the time, "tried to escape, carrying two children from the motorcycle shop he was working for, but he was washed away," she said quietly, showing his black-and-white picture recovered from the latest quake.

Others in the area also speak from experience of coping with disasters.

One of the earliest childhood memories for Kenji Sano, 80, was when he was 2 and his mother wrapped him in her arms to flee the 1933 tsunami that destroyed his home in Kamaishi, 64 km north of Ofunato. They ran to a temple up the street and his mother grabbed a gravestone to keep from being washed away.

Sano's family rebuilt their home in the center of the city and rebuilt it again after the same neighborhood was leveled in an allied naval bombardment on Aug 9, 1945 - the same day the United States dropped the atomic bomb on Nagasaki.

去聽寫專區(qū)一展身手

(中國日報網(wǎng)英語點津 Helen 編輯)

Tsunami memories go back to 1933

About the broadcaster:

Tsunami memories go back to 1933

Nelly Min is an editor at China Daily with more than 10 years of experience as a newspaper editor and photographer. She has worked at major newspapers in the U.S., including the Los Angeles Times and the Detroit Free Press. She is also fluent in Korean.

分享按鈕
滦南县| 潍坊市| 永丰县| 五莲县| 竹山县| 英吉沙县| 大渡口区| 潮安县| 西华县| 葵青区| 潞西市| 中山市| 贵阳市| 新蔡县| 广南县| 兴化市| 二手房| 湖南省| 隆德县| 德保县| 玉林市| 忻州市| 汝州市| 台南市| 万全县| 河北省| 奇台县| 鱼台县| 丹巴县| 崇文区| 黔南| 安平县| 临邑县| 翁牛特旗| 尖扎县| 涞水县| 深圳市| 溆浦县| 韶山市| 色达县| 利川市|