We are the Stuarts (formerly of Imperial) now residing in Okinawa, Japan.

This blog started from a desire to bridge the miles as we were preparing to leave the USA for 3+ years. It has turned into much more. It's part travel diary, part personal reflection, part "sociology of military life" and part mommy-blog. We hope you read something here that is interesting to you (or at least not a total waste of your time).

Showing posts with label creeping things. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creeping things. Show all posts

Monday, August 30, 2010

Typhoon Kompasu Day One PM


We had a great time battening down the hatches today, getting ready for the impending typhoon of doom. Cliff had the day off (almost everyone that was involved in the exercise over the past two weeks, involving crazy hours, was scheduled to have the day off today) but we hadn't intended to spend it doing projects we were just going to have to turn around and undo. Oh well. Turns out, he'll also have tomorrow off. We'll all be confined to our homes at some point, until they call off the threat.

Anyway, we got the patio cover taken down, the BBQ and patio furniture put away in the sheds, the hanging and potted plants secured, bikes brought in the house, trashcans chained down, the portable shed strapped down, etc. We found lots of crazy critters while moving things:


This guy was just like the one who chased me in my own home one day. Oh...I haven't blogged about that yet? I'm still suffering from the flashbacks. It may take awhile to recover.



Jake and Coree found these gecko eggs while chasing a gecko (who had climbed up Cliff's leg, into his shirt, up his back and back out the arm hole to the ground).



Worried about their chances of survival, they thought maybe we should bring them inside. I assured them their mom probably laid them there for safe keeping, even in a typhoon.





Here's our sunset weather watch. Hopefully we'll be back in the AM with something more exciting. Unless this thing turns in the night...which doesn't look likely.

We're pretty sure we're all set with goods...flashlights, water, candles, plenty of food, baking supplies (must have typhoon goodies), games, movies, including Karate Kid II, which came in the mail today via Netflix. Coincidence? I think not. We're saving it so we can watch the Okinawa typhoon scene during our typhoon. We're just hoping the power stays on, of course.

Bring it, Kompasu. Let's see what you got. We've been wanting to try out this cement bunker for awhile now.


Thursday, July 15, 2010

Dang...that's GOT to be poisonous!


I
s what Troy said when I showed him this:



I found her by accident. I was watering my flower beds, minding my own business, when suddenly I saw something like this out of the corner of my eye:



Have I led a sheltered existence if I never knew spiders did this? It just never occurred to me that they could. It looked like she was having a good time, actually...like a little spidey-trampoline. In reality, I'm sure she was ticked. I think if we could hear her swinging, inner-dialogue, we'd find it went something like..."These freakin' people and their stupid garden hoses...can't they look where they're spraying? Sheesh! I've got a limited window of time I'm workin' with here...and now she just basically broadcast my position on the 5:00 news!"

Well, of course I had to run for my camera. She was still swingin' when I got back, but stopped long enough for me to get some good still shots. Then I thought it would be cool to get her swinging on the above video, too,
sooooo....I sprayed her again. This had the desired affect, but judging by the extra vigor she put into her bouncing, I think now it's probably personal. It was clearly premeditated on my part, and she knows it.



Needless to say, I'll be watching my back. (And by the way...I looked it up online and it's a wasp spider...and they are no more poisonous than a bee sting. Is it weird that this makes her seem less exotic now?)

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Okinawa Peace Prayer Memorial Park


Yesterday we finally visited Peace Prayer Park...something I've wanted to do since we arrived on the island. After spending the day there, I'm glad that I had waited...that I've had the opportunity to observe and interact with the Okinawan people before my visit, because the more I've seen, the more I've learned to love and appreciate the Okinawan people. Because of this, the things I learned and saw here had a stronger impact on me. I cried through a great deal of the park.

It is a very large complex, with different buildings and exhibits. Some of them you pay a small fee to enter (like the memorial hall and the museum) but most of it is free. The placards below were in the information center:




Please click and enlarge these photos to read the text.



From here, we hiked the steps to the memorial hall...



Which houses an Okinawan art gallery, as well as a giant, praying Buddha statue. We took photos next to our favorite paintings. I know I've mentioned in other posts how nutso I am over Okinawan roofs...as well as those Okinawan dance bonnets.










This giant Buddha took one man (Shinzan Yamada) 18 years to build. I won't go into all the symbolism here, but there is much. We had this hall to ourselves, so we could sit and take our time. The photo doesn't do justice to the size and beauty of this statue, or the peaceful feeling in the room. I sat down to read the biography of the Okinawan artist in the brochure, and started sobbing. He built this as a remembrance of all the war dead...including his two sons...and as a wish for world peace so that others wouldn't have to know similar tragedy. He started this at the age of 72 and during the 18 years, he fell off the scaffolding twice...and got back up to continue his work.



I'm sure you noticed the colorful streamers surrounding the Buddha in the picture behind Jake. They are actually thousands of little paper cranes (like in Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes), which are made by school children each year and sent to various peace memorial sites around the world.



Patrick compared to the statue.



It's hard to see in the photograph...but there is a cluster of stars painted on the ceiling above. This symbolizes the final resting place of all those who were killed. It's beautiful in person.



The details are stunning. This is all done in traditional Ryukyu lacquer.






Downstairs, underneath the statue, there was a room full of display cases filled with "peace stones" collected from countries all over the world. They were placed under the statue based on the belief that the wish for peace is universal.


Guess what Germany's "stone" is?



As we left the memorial hall, we followed the path around back to the butterfly garden. It is small, but beautiful. It is symbolic to how precious life and peace are.



I thought this was ingenious, and I don't know why I never thought of it. They pulled the leaves which held cocoons off of the trees and clipped them up to hang in one area. Aren't the pupae stunning? I never knew they came in gold. These are Ogomadara...the largest butterfly in Japan.



Small, medium and large caterpillars.

Jake was popular with the butterflies:













Above: (Clockwise, L to R) I love all the many varieties of Shisa dogs on the island. The hands have to be my favorite. They are molds for one of the Buddha hands...and they fit perfectly in the garden. Heading back down the steps of the memorial hall, you can see how large the property is...and this is only a portion of it.
As much as I hate spiders, there are some beautiful ones here.




Next, we walked over to the actual museum.



The above exhibit is right inside the door of the museum. I know you can only see the large shell and half of a smaller one, but there are many actual, unearthed ordnance shells in this display. They represent hundreds of thousands of unexploded shells still believed to exist on this beautiful island. The battle of Okinawa was named by the people here as "The Typhoon of Steel".


The children's area is beautiful. Most of it is in Japanese...but some of it you don't need to read to understand. I loved the globe behind Jake, where pictures of children make up the continents of the world.



I caught a glimpse of this outside one of the windows and it sent my heart aflutter. I guess I'm not the only one who goes gaga over these roof lines, because this appears to be purely aesthetic here...it's just the roof of the museum made to look like a village.

Next, we went to see the permanent exhibit inside the museum, which you have to pay to see. The cost was minimal. Up until this point, we practically had the place to ourselves...but we could hear a thundering roar of chatter coming behind us as wave after wave of Japanese high school students from mainland Japan came up the stairs.


You see this placard first thing as you walk into the exhibit. I gathered this was going to be a timeline of Okinawan history (which it was).



A stunning screen mural...there is no way photographs could do it justice because of the dim lighting.

This is the point where a docent came to tell me that there was not photography allowed in this particular exhibit. (Bummer!)

This is also the point where we decided we were better off allowing the students to pass us as there were just too many of them to be able to see around. Cliff said to me, "Watch them as they come in the room and see what this is about." Sure enough, each group of friends would enter laughing and joking (a universal teen trait) and as soon as their eyes caught the signage and they saw this part of the exhibit was dedicated to the Japanese oppression of the Okinawan people, they fell silent. Without fail.

The groups breezed through quickly, leaving us to take our time. I already knew some of the history...but it was interesting to read the lengths the Okinawan people went to in order to prove themselves loyal "imperial citizens" of Japan. They were forbidden from speaking the Okinawan dialect, and could be shot as spies if caught doing so. Everyone was forced to learn Japanese. As a result, their local language is all but dead. Can you imagine having your heritage, your culture, your language erased by force? I can understand why the Okinawan people value traditional art, music and culture so much...and why peace and harmony are paramount in their society. I loved this quote from one of the brochures...

"The Okinawan Heart is a human response that respects personal dignity above all else, rejects any acts related to war, and truly cherishes culture, which is a supreme expression of humanity."

The displays progressed through WW I and II. To see the pictures, artifacts and testimonials was almost too much. Okinawans were forced to live in caves, many of which were already used as tombs for their ancestors. As the American forces advanced, babies and children were killed by Japanese soldiers for crying (so they wouldn't give away their positions). They were forced to give what little food they had left to the Japanese soldiers and many died of starvation. They couldn't leave the caves for weeks or months at a time for fear of being killed by American soldiers...so their dead loved ones piled up around them. The barrage of American shelling killed civilians by the thousands. Entire families were wiped out in one shelling. It is said that every single Okinawan living today has family members who were killed in this battle. One-third of the Okinawan population was wiped out. I can't even imagine.

In the end, when the Japanese knew they had no hope of victory, they slaughtered civilians as they retreated or forced them into mass suicide. In other cases, Japanese soldiers convinced the Okinawan people that they would be savagely killed by American forces if they were captured, driving thousands to throw themselves into the ocean, to their deaths. Although there's no doubt the Okinawans suffered greatly during the ensuing US occupation (land seizures, civil rights violations), they were surprised that Americans were not the savages the Japanese had led them believe.

As you leave the exhibit, through a huge picture window, this is what you see:



These are the famed "suicide cliffs". It's hard to believe such a beautiful view could be the scene of such tragic events.

Of all the museums I have been to, this one was the most engaging, emotional and powerful. They did an amazing job in every detail, left me wanting to read every inch of the place and learn more...and I highly recommend it, especially if you have an interest in history. (Family and friends: Hint, hint!)



This is the Cornerstone of Peace. Even though you can't see it, there is a flame which was transferred from 3 different sites...peace monuments at the first landing site of US forces in Okinawa (Akajima island), as well as the two sites where the US dropped atomic bombs (Hiroshima and Nagasaki).



These are the most adorable school uniforms I've seen yet. These children are from mainland Japan. You must enlarge the picture to get a better look.



The children all walked around the circle and took notes in their matching books while their tour guide spoke.



I love these shorts!



The path to the cornerstone is lined with stone monuments, etched with the names of the 240,000 war dead...military and civilian, of all nationalities. There are several rows of Americans...this is where they start.


And here is a panoramic view from the Cornerstone of Peace.



As we were leaving, there were still Japanese students coming in droves. Notice the pond to the right we had to cross over...



This little guy swam over to us as fast as he could while we were crossing, looking at us expectantly. Cliff threw him a hibiscus flower...and another, much larger turtle came and snapped it away. But of course, I missed it.



On our way back to the car, we stopped at this monument called "Peace Hill". It is supposed to represent one of the many naturally formed caves which Okinawans were forced to hide in and fend for themselves. The inscription on it says, "A strong will toward peace." This monument's symbolism really struck me after learning of the significance of the caves in the museum exhibit. I don't think I'll ever look at another cave or shrine on this island the same way again.


And just when we thought we might not make it any farther (the heat and humidity were rough) a sweet Okinawan man selling Blue Seal ice cream, beckoned us to his booth. We had to lick fast to keep up with the drips, but we found some shade to enjoy our pineapple, sugar cane, mango or sweet potato cones...



And have some great family discussion about the things that we learned. There was no way we could cover everything there was to see in a day. We'll need to return, for sure.


Why is there war? I wish I had the answer. Selfishness and greed, to oversimplify it. How do we stop it? Another answer I wish I had. It's obvious that taking just the example of Okinawa...it is not enough to be peace loving. They were a peace loving people, and war found them. No matter how they cherished peace, they were caught in this Typhoon of Steel between two great armies. Regardless, I will continue to hope, pray and strive for peace...because while it may seem paradoxical...as we are sort of in the "business" of war in this family...I have personally felt (as a family member of the 1% of our nation who currently provide for it's defense) the truth in the following quote:

"The soldier above all others prays for peace, for it is the soldier who must suffer and bear the deepest wounds and scars of war."---Douglas MacArthur


P.S. And if you guessed Germany's rock is a piece of the Berlin wall...you'd be correct!