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Hiroaki Yoshida had his rice tested at several labs. None of it showed any detectible radiation.
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Despite testing clean, Yoshida struggles to find new customers for rice grown on the southern outskirts of Fukushima.
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To fight a dropoff in sales, Yuko and Hiroaki Yoshida bring their rice and mochi into Tokyo every weekend for the Aoyama Farmers Market.
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Grandma Yoshida says anything you eat could be radioactive, but you still have to eat.
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Asami Girls
Uncanny Terrain benefit photos
Benefit reception at High Concept Laboratories featuring Tatsu Aoki‘s MIYUMI Project 2/5/2012—photos by Daniel Guidara
Harvest Time in Fukushima
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"Yes we can support local produce." A rice field in Iitatemura, uncultivated by government order.
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Fukushima City Lantern Festival
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Fukushima City Lantern Festival
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Fukushima City Lantern Festival
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Sugeno's rice harvest team: Serbian volunteer Milo, daughter Mizuho, and Owada and his grandparents, evacuated from Namie.
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84-year-old rice farmer Yasukawa is defying a government order to burn his rice harvest.
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Yasukawa shows conflicting government orders regarding his rice.
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Watanabe turns over his field in hopes of burying radioactive cesium deeper than his vegetables' roots will reach.
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Mt. Azuma, Fukushima
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Mt. Azuma, Fukushima
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Sunset over Mt. Shinobu, Fukushima City.
Just as the U.S. State Department announces that it’s safe to be here, it’s time for us to leave. We conclude our 20 weeks living and working among the organic farmers and food producers of Fukushima, a week after the State Department narrowed its travel advisory against visiting the area around the power plant from 80 kilometers to the Japanese government’s 20-kilometer evacuation zone.
Seven months since the beginning of the crisis, Japan stumbles toward recovery. Evacuated communities are being reopened near the nuclear plant, even as many efforts to decontaminate land are proving ineffective. With a number of notable exceptions, testing of rice and vegetables is showing much less contamination than was expected based on results in Chernobyl. Researchers investigate the reasons for these levels, considering the differing composition of Japanese soil, particularly certain minerals and bacteria that may remove radioactive cesium or prevent plants from absorbing it—bacteria that may thrive in organically cultivated land.
But the food testing regime is still sporadic, and no amount of lower test results will be sufficient to convince much of the public that Fukushima food is safe to eat. The organic farmers here toil to repair their land using natural methods (land that many of their families have tilled since before the U.S. was a country), to grow their food as free as possible of radionuclides, and to accurately communicate the condition of their produce to consumers. Constantly exposed to background radiation and inhaled particles in their fields, as well as from food and water, the farmers rank with cleanup workers in the groups at greatest risk of suffering health damage.
We will edit the film in Chicago through the fall and winter, and return to Japan next March to cover how the farmers weathered the seasons and how they fare as they prepare to plant again, a year after the disaster. In the meantime, we still need your support to cover the costs of postproduction. Please spread the word and if you can please make a tax-deductible donation to the project.
The Harvest Approaches
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Sugeno relaxes in the grass beside his radish field, Geiger counter in hand.
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Junko and Sugeno finish planting radishes in his mountaintop field in Nihonmatsu.
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Guests at Sugeno's farm enjoy flowers transplanted from the evacuation zone.
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Asami looks out on his rice field in the mountains of Kitakata.
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Asami shows Junko his favorite vantage point.
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Asami and his intern Ota in the chicken coop.
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Watanabe's fruit is showing undetectable radiation levels despite surrounding contamination in Fukushima City.
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Masanori Yoshida looks out on his ancestral land, foreseeing big changes ahead.
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Yumi and Masanori Yoshida care for their vegetable garden.
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Yumi Yoshida displays her sweet potatoes.
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Junko digs up a choice bunch of sweet potatoes.
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The Yoshidas have been eating a lot of sweet potatoes. Sales of the bumper crop have been slow.
Hiroshima, Soma, Nihonmatsu and Fukushima City
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On Aug. 6 we attended the 66th anniversary of the world’s first nuclear attack in Hiroshima, with Yuji Ohashi, a Fukushima City bread company owner who is committed to rebuilding Fukushima in the face of the nuclear fallout.
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The Hiroshima victims' memorial
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Obon, the August ancestors holiday, is especially poignant this year for those who lost family in the March disaster.
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We marked the occasion at a floating lantern ceremony in the ravaged port of Soma, led by fishermen unable to catch their harvest in the irradiated ocean.
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The Soma floating lantern ceremony
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Monks at the Soma floating lantern ceremony
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In Nihonmatsu, 50 km from the still-leaking Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, organic farmer Sugeno planted sunflowers instead of rice on contaminated parts of his land. Sugeno will continue cultivating, growing what he can in greenhouses and otherwise minimizing his customers' exposure. He will work to reduce his land’s contamination each year until he can eventually approach pre-meltdown levels.
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Sugeno is sheltering this goat rescued from the evacuation zone.
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Ota is the 16th president of his family's 260-year-old premium sake company, Daishichi. Their business is up 70% since the disaster, with more orders from the U.S., less from Europe. But it will be another 2 1/2 years before sake brewed from this year's rice reaches the market.
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This wild mushroom on Shinobu Mountain in Fukushima City would normally be edible, if not for the nuclear fallout.
Yoshizawa gets his radiation results and partial compensation
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Yoshizawa at evacuated Namie's city hall-in-exile in Nihonmatsu, awaiting the results of his full-body radiation scan.
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Yoshizawa displays the results of his radiation scan, which indicate he's been exposed to only .3 millisieverts since March. He's dubious of this figure, considering he was within earshot of the reactor explosion and has been returning to the evacuation zone weekly to care for his cows.
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Iwaki hula girls perform at Nihonmatsu Candle Festival.
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Giant dragonfly in Nihonmatsu castle park.
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Bug in a well at Nihonmatsu castle.
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Yoshizawa and Murata throw a barbecue to celebrate receiving half of their substantial compensation claim from Tokyo Electric Power Company for losses due to radioactive contamination of their cattle ranch.
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A mother feeds her son at Yoshizawa's compensation party.
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Revelers were eating this Wagyu beef raw at Yoshizawa's compensation party.
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When the town of Towa was absorbed into Nihonmatsu City, they formed a nonprofit organization to preserve local culture and farming practices. A transplant from Osaka, Ebisawa is director of the group. He's been resurrecting Towa's ancient mulberry industry, and now he's running an active radiation measurement program.
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Ebisawa demonstrates Towa's "healthy food" independent organic certification.
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A diorama in Ebisawa's grocery store depicts traditional fertilizer production.
“Don’t forget us,” cry Fukushima nuclear evacuees
Tens of thousands of people evacuated due to radioactive fallout from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant are living in shelters and storage unit-style temporary housing. Nearly 100 have committed suicide. Many relocation centers are in highly radioactive areas—sometimes higher than the towns that were evacuated.
On July 12, the evacuees held their first protest in Tokyo, marching from Hibiya Park to parliament, calling for their land to be decontaminated, and for better resettlement conditions. “Don’t forget us” was their rallying cry.
Into the evacuation zone
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Hidden under a tarp, wedged between 50-gallon sacks of steaming bean sprouts on a flatbed trailer, we passed unnoticed through the checkpoint into the 30km evacuation zone around the crippled Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. Permits to enter the zone are closely guarded and the review process is slow, so we stowed away with the evacuated dairy farmer Yoshizawa as he made his weekly trip to feed his 300 irradiated cows, which he's keeping alive in defiance of a government order.
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This field in Minami-Soma is still littered with boats, four months after the tsunami.
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Yoshizawa painted "save them or die trying" on the roof of the barn, the shovel of the back hoe that blocks the road to the ranch, and on signposts all along the road.
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Junko Kajino interviews Yoshizawa at his ranch. The rain suits we bought as a cheaper alternative to tyvek safety suits were not a good idea in the heat and sun. We were pouring with hot sweat within minutes.
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The cows were intimidated by my camera shoulder mount at first, but they became friendly very quickly.
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It was 2 microsieverts per hour at this ice cream stand on the way to the evacuation zone.
Fukushima City Nuclear Protest Photo Gallery
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Since the Chernobyl disaster, Ruiko Mutou of the Fukushima Anti-Nuclear Network has been campaigning to get the plants in the prefecture shut down.
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This woman told the crowd that God created nuclear power and don't worry, he'd take care of them. She was quickly separated from the mic.
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He says people in Tokyo need to take responsibility for consuming the electricity produced by the nuclear power plants in Fukushima.
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