2012年10月28日星期日

How a buy wow gear Yasi survivor was inspired to help stricken Japan

It took SES crews three days to get him out. was a team wow items of office workers from Brisbane. One of them managed to crawl through and coo-ee to me from the bottom. was the second time Mr Chandlee had been battered by a cyclone. His house was severely damaged by Larry in 2006.

When the earthquake hit Japan just over wow gold a month later, Mr Chandlee was bedridden, recuperating from leg surgery. He watched live online as the tsunami rolled in.

really felt for those people. When you had this experience - and I had two of these things - obviously it awful, but it very upsetting too. In my case, for months afterwards, when just a slight breeze comes up it frightens you. There this kind of instilled fear in you, of weather. class="story-promo story-promo-middle">

A few months later, Mr Chandlee was heading to Japan and decided wow items to volunteer with grassroots organisation It Not Just Mud (INJM) in Ishinomaki, a town north of Sendai in Honshu's Tohoku region. The town was one of the worst-hit areas, with 3000 dead and 29,000 left homeless.

thought, people helped me and it the least wow gold I can do, he said. I a skilled person and maybe they need those skills. And that proved to be true. class="module image-module module-image-650w366h id1226289385908">

INJM began as an informal group of friends - brought together by wow gold British teacher Jamie El-Banna - camping out at a local university and pitching in where they could. They are now an officially recognised non-profit organisation and volunteers work out of a house offered up by a local.

INJM work crews are sent around Ishinomaki to help clear, demolish and rebuild houses for those who don have the funds or resources to do it themselves. Others are like a wasteland. Everyone is wearing thick ski-gear style jackets and pants and gloves. It freezing.

Outside in the garden is a greenhouse for residents to grow food. Local crops - as is the case all over the region - were swamped by sea water and won be viable again for three to five years.

The tsunami didn just take lives and wow items homes. It also destroyed industries, livelihoods and futures. And even those not directly affected by the disaster have been changed by it.

Naomi Koyama had just finished an International Cultural degree when the disaster struck. Afterwards she travelled to Ishinomaki to help out for a few weeks then returned home. But she wanted to do more, so she moved to the city and became a permanent member of INJM.

I want to have a business to help third world countries. Now I preparing for that at the same time as volunteering, she said.

can work for another company. Thinking about profits all wow items the time . I did it in a previous job and I hate it. I don want to go back to that situation again. class="module image-module module-image-650w366h id1226289387476">

The teams in their brightly coloured wow gold jumpsuits are now a regular fixture around the city. They no longer get strange looks or responses from locals.

live in the community we work in, and I like the think we are part of that community, Mr El-Banna said.

I think the shock of what happened has worn off. But now people have to adjust to the new life they have, and for many it a pretty bleak one, through Ishinomaki, past razed suburbs and piles of rubble or destroyed cars, "bleak" is certainly an apt description. But there is also a sense that while a city that lost so much may not rebuild to what it was, it will still rebuild.
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