Japan Remembers 3/11 Quake And Tsunami


Japan remembers 3/11 quake and tsunami

People in Japan are remembering those who were killed 10 years ago when a massive earthquake and tsunami struck northeastern Japan and triggered a nuclear catastrophe.

A national memorial ceremony will be held later Thursday but those affected have already begun their own prayers.

The magnitude 9 quake generated a tsunami over 10 meters high, killing 15,900 people. Another 2,525 remain unaccounted for.

People who lost loved ones returned to the ocean side early Thursday morning to remember them.

One woman said, "We lost friends because of the disaster, also so many people are still missing. I think we should never forget them."

This city of Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture, saw the highest number of deaths in the country, losing 3,971 people.

A man in his 40s in Ishinomaki said, "The tears started flowing when I came to this hill and remembered how I fled here while being chased by the tsunami. The homes and schools that I've been used to seeing since childhood are no more. It's sad, but I have to accept it."

One man from Minamisoma City in Fukushima Prefecture recalled the day when he lost his grandparents. When the waves started coming, he couldn't get close to the house that they shared.

And afterwards, nuclear radiation caused by the triple meltdown made it impossible to search for them.

He said, "My grandparents died, but I was saved. They were irreplaceable, and I am thankful that they gave me this life."