A message from Fukushima, “Documenting Ian” -Play Until You Cry
documenting ian, blog
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Play until you cry

I was shown around “Smile Park” by Ms. Tomita, a Red Cross staff member.
My day began at the Fukushima Collaborative Clinic (website), an independently-run private hospital that provides services such as screening children’s thyroids for cysts and nodules. I interviewed Mrs. Shina, one of the founding members and spokesperson for the hospital.
Mrs. Shina explained that one of the most sought after services that they provide are “thyroid screening second opinions” since so many Fukushima parents do not trust the results of the healthsurvey overseen by the government. The appointments for such screenings are fully booked until May of next year (!).
Parents have shared with me stories about doctors who vehemently deny ANY possibility of a connection between thyroid cysts and the nuclear meltdown; about being denied access to second opinions at university hospitals; about getting second opinions at hospitals outside of Fukushima and finding out their children have more and bigger thyroid cysts than were revealed in the official exam.
Next, I visited “Smile Park in Fukushima”, a traveling event created by the Japanese Red Cross Society (event website HERE, Japanese Red Cross Society website HERE). The event is brought to cities around Fukshima and provides a safe place indoors for children to play since outdoor activities are limited due to concerns about radiation. I have been struck by how every time I meet a child in Fukushima, he or she seems to have their head in a portable game (which I wrote about HERE in “Trapped Inside”). I quickly learned the reason is because they aren’t allowed to play outside.
Even though many schools and playgrounds have been “decontaminated”, the surrounding mountains and land have not. Parents are worried about their children playing outside as it has already been documented that because of wind, rain and other factors, the radiation levels in areas that had been previously deemed “decontaminated” are already beginning to rise again.
Ms. Tomita allowed me to run, jump and play on the equipment with the children and it was a beautiful, fun and rare time when I was able to forget, just for a moment, why I was there and why this event had been created.
I stepped back to take a long shot of the entire event, the sound of hundreds of children laughing echoing through the hall. Suddenly, I was overcome with emotion and began to sob. At first I couldn’t understand why I was crying and had to excuse myself to go outside and recover.
I almost never cry during interviews; during interviews I am usually too much in shock (is that the right word?) to allow myself to “feel” what is happening. It is when I am editing that the emotions come flooding out; it is when I am editing and I must watch over and over painful, sad, scary moments that the tears tend to flow.
When I returned to the hall, I apologized to Ms. Tomita for my emotion. I explained to her that it had just suddenly hit me why the event existed: these children cannot play outside, cannot live their lives as children normally do, and with that realization I had been unable to stop my tears (just thinking about it now as I write this I am crying). Ms. Tomita leaned in close to me and whispered, “it happens to a lot of people who come here”.
Please also visit this site for more info on Ian and his projects
Fukushima mothers continue to share their struggle with Ian
Posted on December 22, 2012
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