Preview

Reflection on Japanese Earthquake

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
307 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Reflection on Japanese Earthquake
Reflection on Japanese earthquake

After watching the news about the catastrophic earthquake in Japan these days, I was overwhelmed with a range of emotions: anxiety, depression, grief, confusion and shock.

Like a lot of people, I was stunned by percussive images of the ruins of buildings and the bodies of casualties. I felt sorry for the dead. Meanwhile, I was deeply touched by those survived. Instead of being thrown into panic, the Japanese faced up to the catastrophe with dispassion and composure. Although their homes were destroyed and their relatives were violently torn away, they still evacuated orderly and stood calmly in a queue to get reliefs.

However, the case in china is just the other way around. Some Chinese people seem to be keyed up. Many articles concerning this earthquake can be found on the internet, a majority of which are radical. These people said: It serves Japan right. If only the island country sunk and disappeared forever. Admittedly, as Chinese, I felt repugnance for Japan. However, as descendents of the country with a history of thousands of years, we should reach out our friendly hand and let the world know that we Chinese are a civilized and well educated nation. If we merely stand by or even loot a burning house, we are no better than those Japanese invaders.

From my point of view, we are all world citizens living in this global village and international community. In the face of natural disaster, we human beings are vulnerable. No one is powerful enough to escape. We can do nothing but pull together to go through. Therefore, we should relate to those wretches with sympathy and love instead of being narrow-minded and ultranationalistic. Japanese people are innocent. Let’s care for them with tolerant and generous hearts and help them out of the

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    The disaster will weigh on Japan's economic growth through negative impact on consumption, capex projection, and lower capacity to ship export. On the other hand, reconstruction demand in the phase of recovery will have positive impact on reconstruction of housing, replacement of production equipments (i.e. capex), government expenditure, and public investment. If we aggregate those negative and positive impacts, quarterly real GDP growth will be pushed down by a total of -2.1% points for Jan-Mar and Apr-Jun quarters. But reconstruction demand thereafter will push up real GDP growth rates for Jul-Sep and Oct-Dec quarters by a total of +0.9% points. Those said, we revise down our real GDP forecast for FY2011 to almost zero%. The earthquake will have negative impact both on actual household consumption expenditure and on their sentiments, which, in turn, will make households increase precautionary saving. However, strong reconstruction demand in the recovery phase will result in a +2.3% real GDP growth for FY2012. On the price front, we point out that the impact of the disaster will be inflationary rather than deflationary.…

    • 460 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Introduction: Hard workers up in the towers minding their own business, when all of a sudden a crash arises. Two planes less than 5 minutes, on the morning of September 11, crash into the beautiful twin towers in NYC. Many years before this terrorist attack, in December of 1941, a similar but as well different attack occurred. Planes struck the navy base on Pearl Harbor. Streets are full, people working and a plane strikes a tower in the center of New York City. Working on a navy base and planes come out unexpected with terrorists planning to destroy everything. The bombing of Pearl Harbor was definitely unexpected, as was the plane wrecks on 9/11; many can believe Pearl Harbor did not hit as many emotions because it was not terrorists just people from Japan with hate. September 11th was a terrorist attack…

    • 749 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The displaced were allowed to take only what they could carry. In the process, they left behind their homes, businesses, careers, and friends to face a future and fate unknown. (Leperi, K. p. 28). Under this authority, the army uprooted from their homes 119,803 men, women, and children of Japanese descent, aliens and citizens alike, and transported them to hastily built camps in the nation's interior. The issue of Japanese American loyalty after Pearl Harbor arose, therefore, in an already charged atmosphere. Add to that a powerful current of pure racism, and the clout of the economic competitors of Japanese Americans—who would instantly benefit from their elimination—and their mass evacuation would quickly come to be seen as a desirable option. (Frank, R. p.…

    • 1480 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    An untold number of people in the Tōhoku region experienced an electricity outage for a week, resulting in houses not adequately heated for the winter month. The repair crews continuously worked at restoring power for the inhabitants of the Tōhoku region. The humanitarian relief came from multiple countries and provided temporary shelters, food, and medical supplies to Japanese nationals. The United States, United Kingdom, France, and Australian governments sent in civilian and military search and rescue outfits that looked for survivors and located the deceased. One of these outfits discovered an infant two days after the tsunami, and yet another outfit saved twelve people floating off the eastern shore. Numerous governments guarantee the protection of their nationals utilizing extraction outfits to retrieve their citizens inhabiting Japan. Throughout the whole ordeal, the Japanese people displayed patience, kindness, and respect for one another. While some villages altogether obliterated; nonetheless, others remained extensively damaged, some survivors have returned home to rebuild, yet many families and friends remain…

    • 503 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    There were ninety thousand buildings in Hiroshima before the bomb was dropped only twenty eight thousand remained after the explosion. The devastation was immense and widespread. The bodies from the bombing of Hiroshima were laying out covering the road, charcoal black, and flesh hanging off burnt to no recognition. The witnesses of the bombing remembers the masses of people crawling and dragging their bodies trying to get to the water to stop the pain. They did not know that this bombing was only a…

    • 524 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Now a days, with technology at our fingertips, people are able to hear about all sorts of different disasters going on around the world. We see in the news and on the internet the sad news of plane crashes, a home burning down, a city destroyed by an earth quake, or village flooded by a tsunami. Even with the knowledge of the horrible events occurring we still never think much of it because people feel so disconnected by them. When facing a major disaster many of us cannot comprehend how we would behave, or we would just assume that we would know what to do to survive. After reading Amanda Ripley’s book The Unthinkable, it encourages the reader to confront the typical human responses to the stress and life threatening disasters. The major…

    • 1657 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    I have seen horrible things. It has been three days since the Japanese bombed us. As you must already know, we are now at war with them. I was having breakfast when the first wave of planes flew began the assault. I don’t remember how many patients came in, or how many died. It’s all going so fast, it’s so surreal. Almost all the patients have burns all over their bodies. The black smoke and the smell of burning flesh will forever be carved into my memory. At night, us hospital staff have to work in nearly complete darkness. Black curtains were hung over windows at night and lights were kept low, reason being we are fearing yet another attack. So many lives have already been lost, but we are fighting to save as many as we can. Please do not…

    • 167 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Memo Sample

    • 1415 Words
    • 6 Pages

    As an example, when a natural disaster like an earth quake or hurricane strikes, people come together to provide supplies, emotional support, and medical attention to those in need. We also work together to rebuild the areas that have been hit hard like after Hurricane Katrina hit the New Orleans area. Rather than expect others to fend for themselves or live in unsafe conditions, we believe that we are an international community who must assist others in rebuilding their lives. Even though there is a lot of war, famine, crime, we still believe that people are good and the decision to help others, in spite of the horrors that go on, is a decision that must be made. For in helping others, we ultimately help ourselves as well as I am sure you still do in your…

    • 1415 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Several seismic activities occurred along the active Sunda megathrust which located along the Western Coast of Sumatra. The thrust stretched from Myanmar in the north goes down to southeast, along the southern coast of Java and Bali, which end up near Australia (Brown et al., 2015). This megathrust was responsible for the Krakatau eruption and the December 2004 tsunami in the west coast of Aceh province of Indonesia (Chlieh et al., 2007 in Brown et al., 2015). O'Neil (2005 in Sirikulchayanon et al., 2008) stated that since 1750, the Indian Ocean was never experienced a tremendous natural disaster such on the December 2004 Earthquake and Tsunami which resulted big impact toward human and environment in the affected…

    • 118 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Syed, S. (2011, March 18). Japan Quake: Economic Impact Felt Across Asia. Retrieved from British Broadcasting Company website http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-12768928…

    • 4539 Words
    • 19 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Friday the twelfth of March 2011 was a disastrous day in Japan. A massive earthquake and Tsunami hit Japan causing loss of life to thousands of individuals and destroying so many properties. The loss is irreplaceable but nevertheless, aid organizations have stepped as much as do their bit to help with recovering from the disaster. The whole globe is welcome to help the people there with no matter they can. If you want to be concerned with offering help with the Japan Tsunami disaster listed below are few of the methods by which you are able to do so:…

    • 562 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Natural disasters like earthquakes, floods, etc can cause immense upheaval in one’s life. My family friends were subjected to the tsunami that hit Sri Lanka in 2004. They had been there for over a month and were going to head back to Kolkata when the tragedy took place. My ‘aunt’ (we call everyone we know “auntie” in our culture) was unable to carry out normal daily functions for over 2 years after the incident, not because she was handicapped but because of post traumatic stress. She was too afraid to even move out of her house. Now she is better but still has nightmares, sleep issues, anxiety problems and frequent blackouts. She says that she felt like there was no meaning to her life after the tsunami, having lost her family she couldn’t get herself to do anything at all. She felt vulnerable and a prey to nature. She now says that when an incident like that occurs, you either let it define you (which she did for a while) or you try and move forward. And seeing an entirely new city, doesn’t help one get there faster, in fact you end up feeling sorry for yourself. All in all, its great to see the place of destruction rebuilt and new, but that is only one aspect, it can be a positive social change only when you consider all or most aspects.…

    • 475 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Religion and Terrorist

    • 1581 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Yet the incident was big enough to be spread all over the world at once, not many people see it by an outsider’s view. People, especially American, tend to condemn it only as the tragedy brought by the terrorists, like saying, “we are the victims of the tragedy, they are the terrorists who killed our family.” Yes, I think it is hard for them to think about it as an outsider because they were actually involved in that tragedy. In fact, about 3000 people died in the attack. But about me, of course, I feel bad to people who died in the attack, and I don 't think things terrorists did was right. As though they killed many Americans, we got to consider it deeply out of emotion to understand sufficiently. That’s why I took this topic. I will be able to research 9/11 and consider it honestly based on the fact, because I will not close my eyes at something American don 't want to see. As an outsider from Japan, I look it back and analyze it.…

    • 1581 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    GEOGRAPHY WORK FINAL

    • 798 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Earthquakes are considered as the instantaneous violent shaking of the earth’s crust which typically brings about significant destruction due to movement of the plates which the crust is situated on. Buildings can fall, bridges can collapse, and fires can start along with mudslides. A 6 minute massive earthquake of magnitude 9.0 hit Japan on March 11, 2011. The quake’s epicenter was located 130 east of the country’s…

    • 798 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Natural Disaster

    • 298 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The natural disaster is a very painful memory for the victims but with help of the government and the publics then the painful will become…

    • 298 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics