A Study in Resolve

Michelle Magdalena’s journey to tsunami-ravaged Japan led her to believe she is viewing a most patriotic time in the world’s history.

Pacific Grove-based photographer Michelle Magdalena Maddox stepped off a train in the Japanese coastal town of Ishinomaki, and took a giant leap of faith. 


She carried only an umbrella and her camera bag, loaded with a Nikon 5D digital camera, a medium-format Hasselblad, rolls of film, a light meter and a change of underwear. After a quick bowl of ramen at the train station, she set out to find locals to answer a single question a friend had helped her craft in Japanese and write on a card: “How do you feel about nuclear energy?”


It’s a question Magdalena (as she prefers to be known professionally) hadn’t given a lot of thought to in the past. Known for her stark black-and-white portraits and lush nature-based nudes, Magdalena’s previous environmental subjects had focused more on individuality – how driving habits leave a carbon footprint, how takeout food packaging impacts the ocean.


Nature’s wrath became humanity’s disaster, when a 9.0-magnitude earthquake struck off Japan’s Pacific coast. The March 11 tremor was ranked one of the five most powerful earthquakes in the world since 1900, and the tsunami it triggered sent wave after wave of unrelenting water surging over land, destroying everything in its path. Then the nightmare got worse: After the earthquake knocked out the electrical lines supplying the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, the tsunami waves flooded its backup generators and three nuclear reactors suffered full meltdowns, releasing cancerous plumes of radiation into the atmosphere and ocean – a Level 7 accident on the International Nuclear Event Scale, matched in severity only by 1986’s Chernobyl. Level 7, the highest rating, indicates a major release of radioactive materials, with widespread environmental and health impacts.


In April, Magdalena’s friend invited her to Tokyo to shoot a theatrical production. That Magdalena might take up the offer was never a question. That she might add to her journey and photograph the disaster zone from June 22-July 4 scared some of her family and friends.


“I don’t know if you want to call it courageous or dumb,” Magdalena says. “Everyone here was very nervous for me. ‘We’re getting radiation over here; what the heck are you doing, thinking of going over there?’”


But when she sat down and watched videos of the disaster, she came to realize that beauty exists in even the most dire circumstances. “I believe the better parts of humanity come out in times of crisis, when materialism falls through your fingers,” she says.


Magdalena decided to focus on Ishinomaki, about 80 miles from Fukushima, a coastal town that had been all but washed away by the tsunami’s waves. The sign she carried stated that she didn’t speak Japanese, but she wanted to get people’s opinions of nuclear energy, and take their portraits.


She depended, she says, on the kindness of strangers, and the strangers she found were very kind indeed. One helped her carry her equipment off the plane in Tokyo. Another family helped her carry it to the train. A high school football trainer in Miyagi took her to the government building to see if she could get hooked in to any volunteer groups closer to the disaster zone. And at a small prayer site overlooking the devastation in Ishinomaki, she met an English-speaking elementary school principal who was visiting from several hours away. (Most locals, she says, were staying in nearby hotels, returning sporadically to salvage their belongings and reconstruct their homes.)


The principal took her to see Ishinomaki’s own destroyed elementary school. Then they headed for a nearby Buddhist temple, where the tsunami had washed over the adjacent cemetery, toppled gravestones and carried bodies away. As they stood there in contemplation, streams of light broke through the clouds, and the principal said to her: “I don’t know how it is in your religion, but here we would say, ‘This is a time to pray.’”


Debris surrounded them, and the smell of rot. The Japanese face years of reconstruction ahead, which Magdalena describes as one of the most patriotic acts she’s ever seen. 


“Once you’re in rubble, you’re in rubble,” she says. “It’s the energy you leave that carries on. If you leave a mess, that’s what you carry on. But vision and unity is what I think could make these disasters moments of epic cultural revolution.”


On Sunday, Aug. 7, Musicians United for Safe Energy (MUSE) and Japan Disaster Relief will perform at Shoreline Amphitheater in Mountain View. Featured artists include Crosby, Stills & Nash, Bonnie Raitt, Jackson Brown, Jason Mraz, Tom Morello, Kitaro, Sweet Honey in the Rock and Jonathan Wilson, among others.


Two days later, on Tuesday, Aug. 9, Magdalena will present a slideshow to discuss her experiences in Ishinomaki and Miyagi at the Museum of Monterey. The doors open at 6:45pm; a $5 donation goes to help fund the museum.


“I want to make this a community conversation,” Magdalena says. “We have the power to reverse tragedies and turn them into something unifying.”

For more on how the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear disaster will affect U.S. regulation of nuclear energy going forward, read Sara Rubin's story on the Diablo Canyon Power Plant.

In just a few years scientists say large amounts of debris will begin washing up on the U.S. West Coast. Read Kera Abraham's story on what the sea might bring.

Comments

DavidCPowell says...

Well, I tried sending a comment but it kept switching. Here goes again.
As a biologist I feel climate change from fossil fuel burning is a greater danger to life than radiation from nuclear accidents or spent fuel. The format for your commdent page needs help! I can't read what I just wrote! I only see part of it.
David C. Powell, Monterey Bay Aquarium, retired

Posted 4 August 2011, 6:50 p.m. Suggest removal

DavidCPowell says...

You might be interested in the incredible work the staff at the Aquamairine Fukushima ?Aquarium has done to get their aquarium reopened. All their fish died after the power failed after the tsumani. They were not damaged by the earthquake.See <http://blogs.yahoo.co.jp/fukushimaaqu...
David C. Powell

Posted 4 August 2011, 6:56 p.m. Suggest removal

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