Anglicans asked to pray for Japan disaster survivors

Archbishop Fred Hiltz, primate of the Anglican Church of Canada, meets tsunami survivors on a trip to Japan in the fall of 2012. Photo: Paul Feheley
Archbishop Fred Hiltz, primate of the Anglican Church of Canada, meets tsunami survivors on a trip to Japan in the fall of 2012. Photo: Paul Feheley
By Anglican Communion News Service
Published March 11, 2013

Japanese Anglicans made a heartfelt plea for prayer to their Communion sisters today, following an update of the post-disaster situation in their country.

The Very Revd Tazu Sasamori and her colleagues showed a delegation of Anglican women gathered in New York a video detailing the progress of Nippon Sei Ko Kai’s1 (NSKK) Let Us Walk Together initiative.

The video highlighted the work of the initiative’s 7,000 staff and volunteers who have been involved with everything from helping to rebuild the fishing industry in Jusanhama to teaching Japanese to immigrants in Minami Sanriku, to providing support to some of the 320,000 people still living as refugees.

The video demonstrated the crucial role of NSKK in the relief and recovery phase after the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster hit Japan on March 11, 2011. But it also revealed that many thousands of people were still struggling with the emotional and economic losses caused.

Dean Tazu Sasamori, herself originally from one of the worst-hit areas, Tohoku, thanked the members of Anglican Communion for their support since the disaster. Many clergy and volunteers from across Japan and South Korea travelled to the worst-affected areas to help. The Primates of the Anglican Church of Korea, The Anglican Church of Canada and The Episcopal Church were just some Communion leaders who visited. And one of the Episcopal Church’s Young Adult Missioners was working in Sendai this past year.

The Dean went on to say that the nuclear fallout in particular was still causing real concern and anxiety, particularly for young families who simply do not know what the long-term impact of the nuclear fallout will be.

“The affect of radiation will last for many years to come,” she said. “As you can imagine it affects small children and young women a lot. One of my high school students told me, ‘Now I must give up getting married to someone, or not give birth to a child.

“Among some small children they have discovered some whose thyroid glands have gone wrong. One three-year-old asked his mother ‘Will I die soon?’ So please remember them all in your prayers. For those still living in areas [affected by radiation] not being forgotten is a gift.”

Dean Sasamori—who now works in the Diocese of Tokyo, as Dean of St Andrew’s Cathedral, Rector of St Andrew’s Church and Rector in Charge of St George’s Church, Ogasawara—also asked the Anglican Communion to pray for Tohoku Diocese.

“There are only seven priests for a huge diocese. While they are trying to help, support and pray for other people, they are also victims of this disaster themselves.”

Following the presentation, around 30 Anglican women—who are in New York for the 57th UN Commission on the Status of Women—made an immediate response to the appeal by gathering around the NSKK representatives and prayed for them and their country.

 

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