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Saito, Japan Town, Completely Vanishes After Tsunami

Saito Japan Tsunami

TODD PITMAN   03/14/11 02:47 PM ET   AP

SAITO, Japan — It's hard to believe there was ever a village here at all.

The tsunami that devastated Japan's coast rolled in through a tree-lined ocean cove and obliterated nearly everything in its path in this village of about 250 people and 70 or so houses.

Now, three days later, Saito is a moonscape of death and debris, a hellish glimpse into the phenomenal destruction caused by the killer wave that followed Japan's most powerful earthquake on record and one of the five strongest on Earth in the past 110 years.

In Saito and nearby areas, there is no electricity, no running water. There are no generators humming. The night is pitch black. The buildings still standing are closed. No stores are open. Everything has stopped.

"There is nothing left," villager Toshio Abe told The Associated Press on Monday as firefighters in bright orange and yellow emergency suits hacked through the vast wasteland with pickaxes, searching not for survivors but for the dead. Abe said at least 40 of Saito's people were dead or unaccounted for.

Abe said he was gardening Friday afternoon when he felt the earth shake under his feet. Tsunami sirens blared and a loudspeaker announcement warned people to get to higher ground.

The 70-year-old frantically climbed a hill behind his home about two kilometers, or roughly a mile, from the beach. From his safe vantage point, he watched as, 20 or 30 minutes later, the giant wave arrived with a thunderous roar.

It crashed through what appeared to be a two-story-high sea gate, then careened through the valley, following a two-lane road. He saw it rise up, over and through a bridge and smash into scores of houses, ripping most apart instantly. Other houses, he said, were pulled from their foundations and slammed together.

Hills on both sides channeled the wave another kilometer or so inland, depositing the broken wooden innards of Saito's homes along the road.

"I never thought a tsunami would come this far inland," Abe said. "I thought we were safe."

Abe pointed to a battered concrete foundation amid the flattened landscape. It was his own house. "I will rebuild it," he said, "but not here."

Today, everything in Saito is spoken about in the past tense.

"That was city hall," said 48-year-old construction worker Takao Oyama, gesturing toward a two-story white building that stood alone near the beach, leaning at an angle into a sheet of mud and sand.

"That was our elementary school," he said, pointing to a three-story building a few hundred yards away whose entire facade had been ripped off and was covered in black and yellow ocean buoys. Most everything else has disappeared.

"We struggled, but it is all gone," Oyama said. "Everything is lost."

Behind him, a tranquil tree-covered island could be seen just off the coast. That such violence could come from such a picturesque view seemed contradictory, hard to believe.

One crumpled sign indicated there had once been a train station here, a fact Abe confirmed. It was hard to tell where, though. There were no tracks, no trains, no station.

Crushed bulldozers had been turned upside down. The blue-tiled roof of one house lay across a bridge. The wheels of a vehicle stuck out from under the roof.

A few yards away, a bloated black-spotted white cow lay on the foundation of another vanished home, streams of dried blood running from its pink nose, its eyes looking out over the destruction. Embedded in the hardened silt nearby lay a blue baby stroller, covered in what looked like hay.

"We can never live here again," Oyama said as he rested with his wife on a concrete ledge of the broken tarmac road. During an interview, the ledge trembled as another aftershock hit the region.

Asked how many people died, Oyama shrugged. "We've only seen a few bodies here," he said. "I think everybody was swept out to sea."

In the wider region of Minamisanrikucho, of which Saito is just one coastal village, Abe cited authorities as saying at least 4,500 of the 17,000 inhabitants were believed dead. Police estimated 10,000 dead among the 2.3 million people in the Miyagi prefecture, the Japanese equivalent of a state.

The firefighters who arrived Monday came from an inland town to pick through the rubble. Wearing goggles and dust masks, they carried long pickaxes, chainsaws and backpacks. They looked like spacemen walking across a gigantic lunar garbage dump.

As a Japanese self-defense force helicopter circled overhead, they lifted one hunched and frozen corpse from the mud of a dried canal filled with smashed cars and twisted mountains of corrugated iron sheeting. The tsunami had pulled the dead man's dark blue plaid shirt over his head. His white knuckles were visible, his hand still clenched.

The firefighters covered him in a blue plastic tarp and carried him away on a stretcher. Later, they found another corpse in the rubble and carted that one away, too.

The road that winds through Saito is broken apart in several spots. At one point – where the tsunami wave stopped – it leads into a quiet neighborhood of another village where two-story houses stand perfectly intact, their windows not even shattered – as if nothing ever happened.

There, on the pavement, in front of a small government house-turned-shelter where survivors rested on tatami mats, somebody had scrawled huge white letters in the road for air crews to see: SOS.

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SAITO, Japan — It's hard to believe there was ever a village here at all. The tsunami that devastated Japan's coast rolled in through a tree-lined ocean cove and obliterated nearly everything i...
SAITO, Japan — It's hard to believe there was ever a village here at all. The tsunami that devastated Japan's coast rolled in through a tree-lined ocean cove and obliterated nearly everything i...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sophistocat
04:26 PM on 03/21/2011
Opinions change with information....Japanese Spirit ? wikipedia search for > Nanking and unit 731, you might remember they CARVED up USA POW'S while alive for food ,100's a day ,then kicked them into trenches to die..the medical experiments included Horrors beyond human comprehension,ie amputations of limbs ,reattaching them in opposites and backwards ..without anasthesia ...Learn about POW's buried alive for study ..by the Imperial Japanese Army...UNIT 731 ...look it up ...the world and humanity does not forget NANKING ..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ShinjiIkari
Do you understand how stupid it is to be afraid?
06:00 PM on 03/22/2011
Opinions do indeed change with information. In my opinion, the soldiers who commit atrocities are wrong. Nanking, Abu Ghraib, Buchenwald, My Lai, Wounded Knee, the Washita River, the Trail of Tears, Bosnia, Andersonville, Soweto--the miracle is not that God created such monstrosities as human beings, but that God also buried sparks of humanity within those monsters. We can repeat and repeat the horror stories, to make sure we don't forget, or we can fan the flames of our humanity, in the hope of burning out the monstrosity.
03:16 PM on 03/15/2011
When I look at the images all I can think of is where to begin? The devastation is so enormous I wouldn't know where to start. My heart simply breaks for them all.... and it's not over. Continued aftershocks and the threat of nuclear meltdown, doesn't give them a chance to quiet their nerves, hearts and minds... God give them strength.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frant52
11:32 AM on 03/15/2011
It just gets more and more sad as each day passes.
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PharmaCan
Trying to make sense of it all
10:00 AM on 03/15/2011
Many of the photos of the destruction in Japan are reminiscent of the post WWII photos of Nagasaki and Hiroshima - just total devastation. The stories a heart wrenching. It's hard to imagine everything you have being gone in a matter of minutes.

One thing I don't understand is, looking at many of the photos of the small towns and villages, they seem to be built in small coastal valleys with hills on both sides. One would think, all things considered, that the hillsides would be more appropriate building sites. Perhaps when these areas are reconstructed they will consider building on higher ground.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ShinjiIkari
Do you understand how stupid it is to be afraid?
11:41 PM on 03/15/2011
Except that farming on diagonal slopes is very difficult. Add to that the fact that cities would be built on the coast to make it easy to sail from one to another (Japan is a set of volcanic islands, not wide-open prairie), and the Japanese learned centuries ago that life is a series of trade-offs. Ask the people of the Ninth Ward, New Orleans.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sophistocat
04:40 PM on 03/21/2011
Heart wrenching ? look up Nanking in wilkipedia and Unit 731....Learn History PharmaCAN
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PharmaCan
Trying to make sense of it all
06:45 PM on 03/21/2011
Screw you! What does Nanking have to do with what is happening in Japan now?

Learn history? I've forgotten more history than you've ever known.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OneInEveryFamily
03:09 AM on 03/15/2011
Thankfully, they have very strict government regulation with building codes. It is amazing that no skyscrapers came down.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
12:28 AM on 03/15/2011
Beautifully written. Quite respectful. Thank you for taking me to this village. My thoughts are with everyone in and connected to this horrific tragedy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
darcylu
I like Christ but christians are so unlike Christ
11:53 PM on 03/14/2011
Watching as more and more video of the destruction is aired, and reading these stories leaves me speechless and and very saddened that Japan's people are enduring all of this.

I pray the nuclear problems are not going to exacerbate the suffering, and that everyone is swiftly provided adequate water, food and shelter until they can begin to rebuild their lives in the years to come.

Perhaps America can somehow evolve to a state where the major priority is not just amassing wealth, but enjoying being alive and part of humanity.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sophistocat
04:33 PM on 03/21/2011
UNIT 731 ring a bell ? NANKING ? Japanese Imperial Army carving US POW'S up alive for food by the hundreds and kicking them into ditches to die slowly ....Research Darcy , opinions change with information...wikipedia UNIT 731 ..try not to get lost in unit 1885 or the hundreds of units there ...Capture the spirit of the Japanese...try not get buried alive for research ..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
InfinteShibumi
Just breathe...
11:48 PM on 03/14/2011
Words are insufficient...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sophistocat
04:35 PM on 03/21/2011
wikipedia Nanking and unit 731 ....and get back to me ..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
InfinteShibumi
Just breathe...
10:30 PM on 03/21/2011
I haven't revisited the Nanking Massacre since university. But you have enlightened me with the particulars of Unit 731.

I assume you are trying to make a point..? Japan was bombed--twice--for its sins. (And the PRC is no innocent either when comes to committing crimes against humanity.)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rvtgr8
Your boots are made out of WHAT?
10:39 PM on 03/14/2011
I wrote this several years ago during another great tragedy.
RVTGR8

Tsunami

*

A cramp, an itch, a subtle twitch,
Perhaps a fissure in a ditch,
Begat the thoughtless earth to quake
And stir the briny floor awake.

And in the distance on a beach
The children played far from the reach
Of harm’s hand, that fateful morning,
Ne’re a sign and ne’re a warning.

The fisherman’s wife in sweet repose,
A gardener pruning on his rose,
The gendarme strolling on his beat,
The butcher sawing cuts of meat

Would all succumb to ocean’s swell
Sent not from heaven nor from hell.
Indiff’rent nature’s eye won’t blink
No heart to bleed, no brain to think.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Erewhon7
Join atheists, our non-prophet organization
12:23 AM on 03/15/2011
Good try.
Think about improving your rhyming scheme.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SickHippie
No, YOUR micro-bio is empty.
02:10 AM on 03/15/2011
Something wrong with AABB?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MikeWebster
Always happy.
02:14 AM on 03/15/2011
I like it.
10:38 PM on 03/14/2011
From all accounts it sounds like those who survived are dealing with overwhelming difficulties as there is no food, water,etc. I am not sure what the situation is with the Japanese Army in terms of manpower, and availability of equipment. Cant they fly helicopters to the afflicted zone, and drop supplies and water from other parts of the country? Cant our military based in Okinawa help with that? I remember years ago when a terrible earthquake devastated Northern Pakistan, that out forces were doing a great deal of that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MikeWebster
Always happy.
02:03 AM on 03/15/2011
The American military is helping out.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sophistocat
04:47 PM on 03/21/2011
sure MIKE wikipedia "Human Experiments in the USA"..Educate yourself a little
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ywcachieve
'Let's Stay Together', with President Obama!
10:27 PM on 03/14/2011
The earthquake was upgraded to a 9.0. I can't even imagine a 9.0 quake for 5 minutes. Five minutes is a long time when the Earth is shaking beneath you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
darcylu
I like Christ but christians are so unlike Christ
11:55 PM on 03/14/2011
It is simply tragic.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
new beginning
Practice random acts of kindness-change the world
10:25 PM on 03/14/2011
Bet they won't be living in government provided trailers years down the road and then complain when they are made to leave....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Xylem44
...TO THE LEFTTO THE LEFT
10:45 PM on 03/14/2011
THAT'S what is on your mind after reading that story? People are really suffering. Have a heart.
01:38 AM on 03/15/2011
Actually it is quite important to the story. The fact that the Japanese are so well prepared for disasters, and are so intent on being independent & self-sufficient makes their ability to survive this tragedy a lesson for all of us.
When they were told to evacuate they went, immediately, without hesitation or complaint. Unlike here, their first thought is not to loot and grab, thinking only of themselves. They are not in full panic and are all working together to help each other.
In the end they will recover better and more quickly than we would here precisely because they are not relying on, or demanding that the govt save them.

Everyone who can help should try to help yes, absolutely. But these people are true survivors. The fact that they will accept all aid as hand-ups, and not hand-outs is tremendously significant because it is something that we, sadly have lost perspective on, and will prove to be our downful if we fail to take note.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
new beginning
Practice random acts of kindness-change the world
07:33 AM on 03/15/2011
I don't know what you are getting at with your remark.

I find their attitude uplifting despite obscene circumstances - and in marked contrast from that of too many of our own people during and after Katrina. We have a lot to learn from these proud people!
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
09:32 PM on 03/14/2011
Words fail me.