Wednesday, March 16, 2011

News from Nara, 500 miles from reactors

My sister Dinky Romilly is worrier in chief and had this conversation with Olcika at 10:40 AM on Tuesday (11:40 pm Tuesday Ides of March Japan time (yesterday), sums up the situation.

Olga:  we bought plane tickets. the earliest we could get them for was friday.  we're leaving for Budapest Friday evening.  it should be okay here until then although just half an hour ago there was an earth quake here too

 me:  oh shit, this is so terrifying and also so horrible for your research
Olga:  yes, i'm going to lose everything. it sounds like all the others keep working, which makes me feel funny, but there's no way I can do it.  all the foreigners have left.  I am so sad for our Japanese friends, I can't even think about them, but I'm still hoping they can contain the situation.  after all, those damn plants have been shut down for a while
 me:  The sadness is total. I cried when I read that you danced Friday morning with good data results and then your experiment was shut down.  of course the deep deep sadness also goes to all the affected Japanese, which at this point is basically everyone and things are only getting worse
Olga:  yes, I am very scared. our friend's husband is Japanese and he stayed behind and he still thinks it will be okay.  this is the hungarian woman we are traveling with but she is so worried about him.  still, she feels that she has to get her kids to safety above all
 me:  I can't even sleep thinking of all the short term and long term implications for you and Benjy - the research, the pianos, your stuff in Saitama. Such a huge problem, also for your friend. I heard a rumor that the French are pulling out all their nationals from Japan
 Olga:  yes, it's ironic that Benjy was working on getting his pianos there for months and they finally just left.  yes, I am very sad about our apartment and things too. I know I shouldn't be, it's just things, but it's our life in a way, my cd collection. whatever.  but at this point, nothing catastrophic has happened and I am still hoping and hoping that the situation won't get too bad before it gets better.  I don't know. I can't believe our life just got turned upside down in so little time.
me:  Yes, stunning. I gather you'll leave your things in Saitama, hoping to return?
 Olga:  yes. Our ticket now is for 3 weeks, and I believe that we will know by the end of this time if it's safe to return or we have to make long-term arrangements.
 me:  that sounds good. what does the lab director say?  I've been listening to various experts on Democracy Now, Arnie Gunderson of Fairewinds Associated, Aileen Mioko Smith of Green Action in Kyoto and some others.  I can't tell if the information we are getting is better than what you get or not
Olga:  we've been listening to Japanese government officials, who seem frank enough, but they certainly don't want to cause panic, so they tone down everything.  but i watch the numbers, and so far it's nothing horrible.  the wind is now blowing out to the ocean i think.  it was blowing towards tokyo for a while.  Dinky, i couldn't find the plug for my computer, and it's running out of juice, so i have to close it, i'm sorry I'll talk to you soon, perhaps tomorrow morning? evening your time?  Izzy is sick with a fever and wheezing by the way. typical.  Lots of love, olga
 me:  double shit. I'll talk to you tomorrow. go to bed

4 comments:

  1. Here was the first update from a few days ago

    7:34 PM 3/13/2011 Japan Time: Olga being smart decided to evacuate us to Osaka, 577.6km further away from the failed reactors than the 250 and 75 away we were (Away we were: Memories, light the foxholes of my miiiiind). We are luxury refugees speeding on a bullet train that we almost didn’t catch. We were supposed to take a taxi (takushi) from Wako-shi and arrive at the Wako-shi station at 5:30a.m. but taxis don’t run that early so we sprinted over in our two three-wheelers, one stuffed with children and one overflowing with luggage and a baby carriage. Train takes 222 minutes Wako to Osaka including two transfers with no escalators working and no elevators either. Orders came down re: saving Japanese megawatts starting this morning. I think there are going to be Cuba-style outages, almost 8 hours certain days (or maybe all days, we don‚t know yet) w/o power.

    So all this to tell you we‚re playing it safe and if anything melts down we‚re the fock out of here and on to fascist Hungary where there’s no freedom of expression but there is freedom from earthquakes. We hope not because we were just settling in to Tokyo e.g. just today my corntainer of 3 steinway uprights and 3 melodigrands plus much of my ny workshop finally sails from Brooklyn.

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  2. Wishing you safe travels and the easiest possible transition back to work, home, and music, wherever you make them. Thinking of the whole family.

    The US government is organizing charter flights out -- this is mentioned today in the New York Times.

    Justine

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  3. Our hearts and minds are with you!! All of our love and support flies nonstop Brooklyn to Tokyo/Osaka/Hungary! Please let us know if there is anything we can do back here.

    Love,
    Jane and Josh and Mae and Finn and Dragon Sponge (as the kids have named the little one on the way)

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  4. take care you guys, and let me know if I can do anything. So sorry.

    lots of love, deborah
    special hello to Zsofi & Izzy

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