Roland Kelts's Blog, page 54

August 13, 2012

August 9, 2012

Latest Paper Sky column on travel and terminal ... illness

Bit too personal, this one. Click to enlarge, if you dare ...














 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 09, 2012 06:42

August 8, 2012

Hosoda's Ookami Kodomo no Ame to Yuki

Mamoru Hosoda's (Summer Wars, The Girl Who Leapt Through Time) latest film, Ookami Kodomo no Ame to Yuki (Wolf Children: Ame and Yuki), is an exhilarating work of animation, and a measured, patient and exacting example of first-rate storytelling.



 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 08, 2012 18:42

August 7, 2012

Chinese woman turns Geisha in Shimoda

...where, incidentally, American Perry and his 'black ships' first landed 150+ years ago.



 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 07, 2012 22:12

August 6, 2012

An American in Hiroshima, 2012






An American's key role as Hiroshima commemorates atomic bombing


Steven Leeper oversees Hiroshima's commemoration of the Aug. 6, 1945 dropping of the atomic bomb. The US presence at the memorial ceremony has grown, with even President Truman's grandson in attendance this year.









By Roland Kelts, Hiroshim a

At 8:15 a.m. on every Aug. 6 since 1952, a moment of silence descends over the Peace Park inHiroshimaJapan, to commemorate the estimated 200,000 victims of the first atomic bomb deployed in a wartime act of aggression.




Related stories




Japan: One year after Fukushima nuclear disaster, 4 repercussions



Think you know Asia? Take our geography quiz.
Hiroshima 65 years later: US attends ceremony, but offers no apology






Ads by Google

無料翻訳

Toolbarを使って簡単&無料翻訳。

Toolbarは無料。今すぐインストール!

FreeTranslator.Inbox.com





Subscribe Today to the Monitor

Click Here for your FREE 30 DAYS of

The Christian Science Monitor

Weekly Digital Edition





Among the attendees are family members of the deceased, foreign and domestic dignitaries, and visitors from around the world. The silence is signaled by the solemn ringing of a Peace Bell by a bereaved family member and a local schoolgirl. Like the annual 9/11 memorial services in America, the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Ceremony in Japan, broadcast live and replayed throughout the day, is almost impossible to avoid: a haunting 24-hour reminder both of past horrors and the ever-present threat of nuclear annihilation.

Since 2009, when President Obama announced that he sought to visit Hiroshima, stories of a more proactive American engagement with one of history's worst nightmares have grown. In 2010, John Roos became the first US ambassador to attend the ceremony, and he was here again this morning (“very moving and powerful,” he tweeted). Also on hand today were Clifton Truman Daniel, the grandson of President Harry Truman, who authorized the bomb, and Ari Beser, grandson of Jacob Beser, the only person involved in both atomic bomb deployments, in Hiroshima and Nagasaki

They joined an estimated 50,000 visitors from 70 nations for a ceremony and declaration of peacethat will be redelivered via live stream this morning at 9:15 EST.

For the past five years, another American seated in the VIP section also has been intimately involved in ensuring that the ceremony goes off without a hitch. Since 2007, Steven Leeper has been chairman of the Hiroshima Peace Culture Foundation, responsible for overseeing the annual ceremony, the Hiroshima Peace Museum, and the city’s efforts to communicate its message to the world.

That a citizen of the nation that dropped the bomb on Hiroshima now leads the city’s 100-employee, $18 million peace foundation raises eyebrows.

“Very odd that I as a non-Japanese should be at the very top,” Mr. Leeper admits.  “But I’m not here to tell them how to run things. I’m here to help them rid the world of nuclear weapons.”


RELATED: Think you know Asia? Take our geography quiz.



First tapped by Hiroshima's former mayor

Leeper was first tapped to join the cause in 2001 by former Hiroshima Mayor Tadatoshi Akiba, the best known of the city’s many mayoral advocates of a nuclear weapons ban. Unlike most Japanese politicians, Akiba is fully bilingual, a graduate of the University of Tokyo and MIT in Boston.  As president of the international organization, Mayors for Peace, he traveled the globe to convey Hiroshima’s plea, leading a delegation of mayors from 61 nations at the UN to review the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in 2005.

more here



 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 06, 2012 06:37

August 5, 2012

Totoro straw man on Tawain farm

Or ... Ghibli scarecrow?



[courtesy @heterophyllum]
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 05, 2012 22:57

Enoshima...

...ah.









 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 05, 2012 03:14

August 4, 2012

Summer in Japan

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 04, 2012 04:57

July 29, 2012

Latest NARUTO film nearly triples previous opening numbers




The latest Naruto feature film, "Road to Ninja," has reportedly tripled opening weekend attendance records set by the last release in Japan, according to studio sources.  [Opening tix above courtesy of Nunokawa-san  & Pierrot.]



**Update: "Road to Ninja" grossed $3.8 million, more than twice the previous film's opening box office, and the highest ever for a Naruto film. It was # 3 overall in Japan, and # 10 worldwide.

Look out, Ghibli.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on July 29, 2012 23:25