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Resilience, Reconsidered in Japan

Resilience, Reconsidered in Japan

Reading Time: 11 minutes

It’s a Wednesday in January and the Sendai 3.11 Memorial Community Centre is quiet.

Not in the way that museums or doctors surgeries are, but in a way that feels intentional rather than awkward. The memorial centre sits inside the same building as Arai station on the Tozai Subway Line, which was opened in 2015 as part of Sendai City’s phenomenal efforts to encourage and support development following the earthquake and tsunami on 11 March 2011.

The entrance to the centre is simple and unassuming. Rather than a sense of arrival or destination, it feels like a place to pause and pass through slowly, aware that its job is reflection not statement.

Photo: mtthwhgn

It’s inside this centre, as part of the CLAIR Japan Study Tour (more on that later), that I was honoured several weeks ago to hear from Midori Hanabuchi, an 83 year old woman, who now volunteers at the centre to share her experience of the impacts of the tsunami both at the time and since.

Downstairs, stylised relief maps, two dots on the wall clock marking the time of the earthquake at 14:46 (below) and a table with some leaflets are the most prominent signs of why the centre exists. Our guide tells us that ‘even now, people are scared of looking at the sea’.

Photo: mtthwhgn

It’s an atmosphere of calm and community, with rows of bench seating, musical instruments propped against the wall and a lending library in the corner with colouring pencils for children.

Photo: JLGC

Walking up the staircase you pass an interactive piece called ‘Our 3.11’ which invites people to share a memory of the day and a hope for the future on tanzaku, strips of paper which dangle and flutter as you walk past.

Photo: mtthwhgn

Stepping onto the upstairs landing you’re met by a wall-sized map covered in dozens of sticky notes, the work of illustrator Junko Sato, who describes this as an ‘updating map’ which people who were displaced can use, to share memories of their community. “There used to be lots of octopus, now they are gone” reads one message (thanks Google Translate).

Photo: mtthwhgn
Photo: Milwaukee Independent

The second floor hosts a permanent exhibit on the wide-ranging impacts of the disaster, the progress on recovery and space for special exhibits which examine the disaster from various perspectives.

It’s inside this gallery that Midori recounts her experience of that day to the 9-person Japan Study Tour delegation. She explains in detail the damage caused to her local community, and what has happened in the years that have followed.

Photo: Polly Kwok

Having been displaced from her home, she described the thin walls of the cold and quickly constructed mobile home, and the intense feeling of isolation from her community which she was separated from. Eventually leaving her temporary accommodation 4 years after the tsunami, she noted that much of her time was spent crocheting, as she handed out her crocheted cat paw keyrings to everyone in the group.

Photo: JLGC

The catastrophic damage caused by the tsunami stretched along hundreds of miles of the Pacific coast of Japan. In the Sendai area alone, 931 people were recorded as dead or missing (of an estimated total of 19,759) and more than 120,000 buildings were destroyed (of a total of more than 1 million).

The 3.11 Community Centre in Sendai is just one of dozens of similar sites. There are 75 official memorial locations, across 4 prefectures, where the memory of the earthquake, tsunami and subsequent nuclear disaster are kept alive, plus many more local, personal and unofficial memorials. It’s an international story with intensely local memorialisation.

Photo: e-geos / ReliefWeb

Sendai is proud to be known as the City of Trees, although there are’t many in leaf in January. Inside the community centre, before and after photographs are silently projected onto a plain wall. For me, the most immediately noticeable differences is the absence of trees in the post-tsunami images.

Photo: mtthwhgn

I’m struck in this room by the power of a timeline. It’s a very clear visual tool for setting out what was known and when. The similarities in design, scope and intent, between Sendai and the community timeline collated by researchers from London School of Economics in the months and years after the Grenfell Tower fire are apparent.

Photo: JLGC
Photo: Andreia Leitao

Earlier in the tour, we’d heard about the immense challenge of rehousing thousands of people and subsequent rebuilding of infrastructure. But how do you rebuild community and belonging?

The variety of ways in the centre for people to leave their memories, as they occur to them and in their own words, felt like an attempt for disrupted communities to persist in some sense.

The building itself reflects that. Stepping into the exhibition room, where images of destruction are confined, there is a subtle but deliberate shift below your feet. The smooth polished concrete of the station gives way to wooden boards salvaged from the gymnasium of the Arahama Elementary School. Boards that once supported school assemblies, sports days and ordinary afternoons, underpin collective memory.

That consideration of ‘the everyday’ stayed with me as we moved on through the study tour. It feels as though disaster management is woven into daily life and into architecture.

Photo: JLGC

Ordinary Resilience

As the week unfolded I kept feeling that sense of everydayness. Despite the scale of the disasters they are at risk from, the Japanese approach to resilience feels…ordinary.

  • Schools double as places of safety for local communities without fanfare.
  • Fire extinguishers, defibrillators and hydrants are designed for ease of access and community use.
  • Warnings, instructions, and cues are present everywhere, but don’t demand attention.
  • Lifts in buildings contain a ‘welfare box (read: an emergency toilet) for people trapped for extended periods.
  • Infrastructure is actively and openly designed with disaster in mind, rather than as an afterthought or something to be hidden.
  • Red triangle stickers (which you might just make out in the photo below) on high-rise block windows, which are required by building regulations. They indicate glass which is more easily breakable to allow firefighters access if other building entrances are compromised.
Photo: mtthwhgn

This ordinariness perhaps stems from Japan’s long history of earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanic activity. Disaster simply isn’t a low-probability entry on a risk register, but something which many people have personal memory of, and is ingrained into cultural memory.

In one lecture with Sendai Government, I wrote down “Safety is managed with people, not for them.”

In the coastal area of Sendai, the decision was made not to rebuild homes at all in this high-risk zone. Instead, it’s been rebuilt as a place for leisure, agriculture and commercial activity, with housing now only on higher ground. I have unanswered questions relating to why residential coastal development had been allowed prior to the 2011, given the known seismic risk, but I’ll have to explore that in slower time.

Everything runs like clockwork, but on one of the days we made an impromptu stop by a facility in Sendai designed to help foreign-born residents with navigating life, and there was a prominent display by the door with disaster prevention advice in the main languages spoken in the city.

Photo: mtthwhgn

About the Japan Study Tour

Each year the Japan Local Government Centre (London) invites senior executives in local government to Japan for a week of seminars, workshops and site visits. The objective is to exchange information on current issues relevant to local government. It truly was a brilliant experience, not just from what I learned from Japanese colleagues, but also the peer learning from UK colleagues.

Photo: mtthwhgn

The theme of the 2026 tour was Northern Ambition, which was reflected in both the location and participation, with time was split between the capital city Tokyo and Sendai City, and participants drawn from equivalent UK cities London, Manchester, Liverpool, Sheffield, Leeds and Newcastle. The weather was sunny for the majority of the trip, but cold with the occasional sighting of snow!

The programme covered a broad range of aspects relating to devolution, industry-government-academia collaboration, tourism policy, and disaster preparedness.

 

Photo: JLGC

Every single site visit and seminar was interesting and thought provoking. Not all of the content spoke directly to emergency management, but it was refreshing to learn new things, consider different perspectives and think about how resilience intersects with innovation, economic development, and place-based governance.

Photo: mtthwhgn

The itinerary was thoughtfully designed, with a rich mix of national, regional and local perspectives alongside opportunities for cultural exchange. Many of the activities highlighted a specific infrastructure, initiative or business. That focus is understandable, but I found myself thinking about the complex web of political and social dimensions which must underpin these activities.

Photo: mtthwhgn

One of many highlights was the opportunity to meet with Mayor of Sendai, and have a conversation about the different aspects that each of the UK delegates had taken from the visit.

Photo: JLGC

I thought about how we might, hypothetically, run a similar tour in London for international delegates. My expectation is that we’d tell them about command structures, interoperability and coordination. By contrast, at the sites in Sendai or Tokyo, the consistent message was about creating the conditions for resilience upfront, that resilience is more than the ability to respond when something goes wrong. That’s a real lesson.

Responsibility, readiness and the reality of response

One visit in particular brought that aspect about pre-disaster decisions into much sharper focus.

Twelve kilometres outside of Sendai, on the Pacific coast, the community of Arahama was once home to eight hundred households. Miraculously, all of the students who were at Arahama Elementary School that day survived the tsunami. The school building has subsequently been preserved in its damaged state, as a memorial and museum to the impact and resilience of the community.

Photo: mtthwhgn

We were privileged to meet with Kawamura-sensei, former Principal at the school turned volunteer guide. He seems to carry the burden of his responsibility heavily and it feels like the most visceral visit of the tour, there’s an interview with the principal which goes into a bit more detail than he did with our group.

What I took from this was that some of the most important decisions were not made on the day of the tsunami, but in the years beforehand. The routine choices about training and equipment, how the school understood its role in the community.

I was reminded of the reflections of Richard Millett KC in his closing remarks to the Grenfell Tower Inquiry, who said “every decision, every act, omission, interpretation, understanding, practice, policy, protocol, affects someone somewhere, someone who is unknown and unseen, but who is an adored child, a beloved sister, a respected uncle, a needed mother”. It seemed to me that Kawamura-sensei was very aware not just of his duty to the children at his school, but to their families also.

Schools in Japan all seem to play some role in functioning as emergency centres. They’re provided with equipment and supplies from local government organisations, and at Arahama the principal made a proactive decision long before the tsunami to store supplies on the third floor. Had they have been on the ground floor, like in many other schools, they would have been washed away by the water, and people stranded without essential support.

Three classrooms on the fourth floor of the school have been given over to telling the story, one contains the 1/500 scale model LOST HOMES. Across Japan, volunteer architecture students have worked with residents from villages and towns swept away by the tsunami to make faithful reproductions of what was lost and to express their condolences to places “once full of everyday lives”.

Photo: mtthwhgn

One thing which surprised me is the lack of security. The building is open to the elements yet there’s no obvious CCTV, minimal fencing, and no apparent security presence.

On the fourth floor, which became a makeshift community shelter whilst people of all ages awaited helicopter rescue, we were invited into a classroom to watch a short movie explaining about how the school became a lifeline. It wasn’t just the 91 students in school that day, but more than 200 members from the local community also fled to the school on hearing the tsunami warning.

We watched the film were seated on school chairs, which was poignant.

Photo: mtthwhgn

Other rooms are more future focused. There are small demonstrations of the types of equipment that schools have, and some information on what steps people can take to be better prepared or at least to know what to expect should they find themselves in an evacuation centre. Even simple things like the privacy screens (shown on the orange pedestal in the image below) show that further consideration has gone in to supporting people’s basic needs for shelter and dignity.

Photo: mtthwhgn

More questions than answers

It’s important to acknowledge the limits of a short visit. The locations we were taken to were curated, and despite the phenomenal efforts of translators and interpreters, discussions often partial or facing a cultural barrier.

Sadly there wasn’t enough (perhaps isn’t enough) time to discuss every facet of Japanese disaster management. Therefore, I draw these reflections lightly, and with humility.

There is much more that I could learn, but the study tour is a phenomenally useful experience. I’ve come back with more questions about how resilience is framed, and where responsibility is placed.

Photo: JLGC

In the UK we tentatively ask individuals to be alert and ready. Japan’s approach seems bolder, trusting (or perhaps accepting) that the scale of their disasters mean a whole of society approach is the only answer. If resilience is something we expect of people we need decisions about resilience to include and be transparent with people.

Applying the art of kintsugi to disaster recovery

Applying the art of kintsugi to disaster recovery

Reading Time: 4 minutes

 

In August, I posted on X (let’s leave that conversation for another time) a provocative comment, questioning whether recovery exists:

My feeling is that emergency management currently approaches the post-disaster phase too simplistically. Reality is that this is often a complex, iterative process, without a defined (or definable?) end. This post is a companion to a podcast episode I was invited to join recently. This is the fourth episode of the JBA Climate Resilience podcast and focused on the post-incident period. In preparation for the recording, I was thinking about alternative ways to view the recovery process.

In Japan, there’s an artform known as kintsugi. This involves repairing broken pottery with a mixture of lacquer and gold powder. Rather than hiding the damage, kintsugi celebrates it – emphasising both the transformation and repair. Instead of cracks and scars being something which diminishes, the ‘flaws’ are made visible; an obvious, glistening sign of change, growth and memory.

Would it be possible to view the process of recovering from disaster in a similar way? Drawing something beautiful from the damage instead of a rush to return to a pre-disaster condition.

When does recovery end?

The six stages integrated emergency management cycle suggests that a recovery stage exists, and I don’t dispute that there is ‘before disaster’ and there is ‘after disaster’. But, reducing the complexity of this process to ‘recovery’ might hold us back doing it better.

The UK Government’s guidance explains that recovery is the “process of rebuilding, restoring and rehabilitating a community following an emergency”. They note that this phase ‘continues until the needs of those affected have been met’.

That sounds logical, but if you pull at that thread it begins to unravel.

Modern societies are grappling with challenges on a day-to-day basis. Food insecurity, fuel poverty, discrimination, inadequate housing, ageing infrastructure, cost of living crisis. People can find themselves ‘in need’ daily and in many complex ways. But the definition of recovery seems to mean to me that it can’t be completed until all of those systemic and chronic issues are addressed.

In the podcast, my fellow guest Evie Whatling said “measuring the success of recovery is hard because when does it end?”

Looking at recovery differently

The post incident language is biased towards the optimistic.

Phrases like bouncing forward, returning to normality or (*shudder*) ‘new normality’ are jarring. If you’ve lost your home to wildfire, a flood swept away the business that brings you your livelihood, or a friend or family member lost their life, there is no ‘going back’ or ‘normality’. Those phrases minimise our understanding of the harms experienced.

In an emergency, responders are often obvious; marked out by their flashing blue lights or hi-visibility jackets. If we can have responders, then perhaps we need to consider who the ‘recoverers’ are.

Perhaps recoverers might include functions such as:

  • loss adjustors from insurance companies,
  • teams involved in cleaning up and mending damage,
  • healthcare staff who provide ongoing physical and wellbeing services,
  • the finance staff who have to reallocate budgets from existing plans, and of course
  • local community groups, organisations, leaders who hold communities together and their constituent members.

These recoverers are far less distinct. There’s no sirens. No protective equipment. Perhaps some can be identified by their sharp suits or clipboards, but often, they’ll look like everyone else.

Most responders (and I’d suggest a lot of recoverers) are not ‘of the place’ an incident happens. As a result, local knowledge about the place, how it’s communities function and what they need is limited, certainly initially. Generalisations and assumptions made might address some of the need for a short period, but are unlikely to meet the wide spectrum of need that inevitably exists.

I mentioned in the podcast, the brilliant work of Lori Peek and Alice Fothergill. Their project ‘Children of Katrina’ explored how children cope after disaster. They found three post-disaster trajectories which could inform the support people might need.

  • A declining trajectory – where life is marked by ongoing shocks, setbacks, and instability.
  • A finding-equilibrium trajectory – where access to resources and support (before and post disaster) can halt decline.
  • And a fluctuating trajectory – where misalignment of interventions results in an unstable progression.

This could be one way of thinking in more detail about the recovery process. Another is found in the work of Hugh Deeming who proposed an additional ‘stabilisation’ phase as a transition between response and recovery. A definition of stabilisation is proposed as ‘the exercise of interim control following an incident in order to increase public safety, and to mitigate the risk of secondary impacts occurring’.

The definition is perhaps less explicitly connected to engaging directly with communities but I think that’s where kintsugi comes in…

Kintsugi and recovery

Like recovery, kintsugi process is slow, mindful, multi-stage process:

  • The human impulse to fix the broken pot is strong. However, the first stage of the kintsugi practice invites you to notice the brokenness.
  • Glue (or traditionally tree sap) is applied to reconnect the broken pieces. This evokes the bonds and relationships formed in communities during adversity and healing.
  • Whilst the glue is wet, the pieces are held in place using tape. It takes time for the glue to set, which is perhaps equivalent to the proposed stabilisation phase, where subsequent activities can’t proceed until some equilibrium has been found.
  • Next, excess glue might be removed using a file, smoothing away that which is no longer required. In my mind, this is similar to the steps of refining the often quite blunt initial responses, with something which better meets needs.
  • And finally, gold powder is used to highlight the cracks and repair. Respecting the damage.

Perhaps if there’s one thing to take away from this, it’d be to acknowledge that ‘recovery’ is more nuanced that we sometimes assume. Spending more time considering it’s complexity could help recoverers to provide more effective post incident support.

You can take a listen to the episode here: