How Citizens Can Help Survivors

On March 11, 2011, one of the largest earthquakes ever to hit Japan sent a tsunami deep into cities and towns along the coast of Tohoku, the northeastern region of Honshu, the country’s largest island. The wave killed 16,000 people and destroyed or damaged more than a million buildings.

I’m an American living an hour north of Tokyo in a city called Sano, and that quake is still in my bones. It sounded like wind approaching underground. The power went out and none of us knew until the next day the devastation that lay farther north. When we saw it on the news and recognized places we’d been, we had to help.

Helping after a natural disaster is not easy, however. Most relief organizations advise staying out of the way and just donating money. Those who’ve been in disaster zones around the world tell stories of people dumping piles of unsorted junk that nobody wants to pick through. Kindhearted supporters helping the wrong way like this make the situation worse, not better. Yet, there is a way for citizens to help directly by bringing gifts beyond the life support provided by governmental and non-governmental organizations. Small groups of volunteers can comfort survivors personally and give them hope.

Large relief operations necessarily focus on food, shelter, and medical care, and they’re good at it. In Japan, the military set up camps at breakneck speed. The Japanese Red Cross deployed thousands of doctors and nurses. Gymnasiums and other public spaces became shelters. After this phase, though, survivors ended up on mats on giant floors, surrounded by strangers, fed three times a day, checked off as having been looked after. Two days went by, then four, then a week, and still the survivors sat with only thoughts of their homes washed away, their jobs gone, their cars missing and, most of all, the people they’d never see again. Depression became the sharpest thorn in a survivor’s side.

To help, we started Socks for Japan to deliver socks with care letters from people around the world. We learned from reports of past disasters that people in shelters often request socks, and they were a perfect item for our volunteer group to manage. Socks are cheap, they don’t break or spoil, and everybody needs them. We focused on this simple care package, sorted into five categories for men, women, boys, girls, and babies. We would not create chaos by collecting many different kinds of clothing or other items. We checked with Japan’s postal service and shipping companies to be sure we wouldn’t cause trouble by receiving thousands of boxes of socks. They assured us that we would not.

We announced our project to the world, and the world stepped up. Those thousands of boxes arrived from the United States, Australia, Canada, and dozens of other nations including Malaysia, Singapore, the United Kingdom, Peru, Qatar, Croatia, French Guiana, and Finland. Some boxes burst open to reveal 50 pairs of socks with colorful notes from children. One pair arrived alone in an envelope. The letters of encouragement helped our volunteers as much as they did survivors. In a time of sadness and fear, it boosted my spirit to hold boxes from home. Return labels from churches, Brownie troops, neighborhood coffee shops, small town light and power departments, Mrs. Wilson’s fourth grade class, and other mainstays of American culture poured in. Over 70 percent of donations came from the United States. I was so proud of my country.

Forty local volunteers sorted this precious cargo each night after work and on weekends, helped by 20 volunteers from overseas. We made two trips per week 200 miles north into the heart of the disaster zone, visiting shelter after shelter to hand-deliver each package. Community leaders heard about us and requested visits to their neediest people. We became experts at packing our gifts, 100 pairs and letters per clear storage bag, and knew how many thousands we could take in our van.

The result was smooth distribution of a basic item that people needed, with a letter that brightened their day. Survivors held our hands while telling their stories. They’d cry and say how badly they needed socks. Sometimes, they’d hold up a letter proudly to announce, “This came all the way from America!” We weren’t saving lives, but we were improving them.

In 35 trips, we delivered 160,000 pairs of socks with letters. Some went to big cities like Ishinomaki, where people lined up in front of Watanoha train station by the hundreds and waited patiently to receive a gift from our van. One time there, we ran out of socks before reaching the end of the line and worried for a moment that a riot would ensue. Instead, the next person after the last person to receive socks told us, “We understand. Just please come again.” We did, on our very next trip. Other socks went to fishing villages at the ends of roads scraped through tsunami mud, where our volunteers walked to old ladies on mats who lifted their heads to see who’d come for a visit. None of us will forget the transition of their faces from expressionless resolve to delight. “For me?” they’d ask. “You brought these for me?”

Some of the survivors wrote back to their donors, and friendships formed. Charmingly rough English made the letters more touching. One read, “Received a warm socks. I get happy tears. Japan still must work hard. Going to overcome the hardships together. Thank you very much.”

Citizen volunteer groups can help survivors by delivering the care of the world directly where it’s needed most. When they focus on one needed item and bundle it with love, they reach people in ways that large organizations do not. Creating in somebody the idea that their survival was a blessing, that they will find happiness again, is important. Basic necessities keep people alive, but compassion provides the joy of being alive.

Jason Kelly is a financial writer based in Sano, Japan. Socks for Japan trip reports and photos are permanently posted at socksforjapan.com.


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14 Comments

  1. Betty Furuta
    Posted March 18, 2013 at 7:15 am | Permalink

    Jason Kelly, you’re unquestionably one of God’s angels on planet earth. Your timely observation, analysis and intervention were brilliant in identifying what Tohoku tsunami survivors needed. “Socks for Japan” (SFJ) was an exemplar of non-profit, international volunteerism at its best and, to date, the project continues to inspire. The online newsletters were another magnificent contribution conceived in the midst of crisis. Those periodic notes while the project was in-progress kept me glued to the SFJ website. Mass media regularly reported on the disaster and its aftermath, but you provided personal narratives & photos of heartwarming humanity amidst wrenching tragedy plus all the logistical challenges in delivering socks to folks in need. With this 2-year post tsunami update, SFJ still remembers us donors, however modest our individual contribution. Domo arigato but we owe you the thanks. Incidentally, you are one talented writer/journalist. Should investments become uninteresting, you have another career waiting.

    • Posted April 5, 2013 at 4:53 pm | Permalink

      Thank you so much, Betty. What a lovely comment.

  2. Georgiiana Shaylor
    Posted March 18, 2013 at 3:27 am | Permalink

    Truly moving and motivating.

  3. Monica Brewer
    Posted March 17, 2013 at 12:54 pm | Permalink

    I can’t believe it has been 2 years. You have done a wonderful to the people of Japan. Who knows you may have helped my relatives. Keep up the wonderful work. 🙂

  4. Betty Conley
    Posted March 13, 2013 at 11:51 pm | Permalink

    Your article is also a great gift. It was forwarded by a friend and I just wanted to thank you for writing it. Distributing socks was a brilliant idea and it is just wonderful that so many took it up and did something about it. A tangible gift blesses both the giver and the receiver and hearing about it, thanks to you, has blessed me.

    Thank you so much!

    • Posted April 5, 2013 at 4:54 pm | Permalink

      You’re most welcome, Betty! Thank you for the warm comment.

  5. Jackson Kochen
    Posted March 13, 2013 at 10:51 am | Permalink

    Bless you for your efforts.

  6. Elizabeth Wilson
    Posted March 12, 2013 at 6:54 am | Permalink

    Jason,

    Thank you so much for this post. My class of 7 students with autism and other developmental disabilities collected, individually packaged and shipped 7 large boxes with over 2700 pairs of socks for the people of Japan. You graciously posted a picture of several beautiful children holding bags of our socks. My students were so happy to be helping. What you did was such a good thing.

  7. Chris Farrow-Noble
    Posted March 12, 2013 at 2:59 am | Permalink

    Do you know specifically how we can be helpful now to the survivors in Japan?

  8. Wendy Weger
    Posted March 12, 2013 at 2:12 am | Permalink

    Hello dearest Jason and friends…..

    I do indeed remember this day from afar in the Pacific NW USA and yet my heart and soul couldn’t have been closer had I been standing on Japan’s battered coast..I still weep when I see or remember the events and also realize it could easily have been right here at home….

    I was brought to tears again just now Jason, by your tremendous heart and compassion and tireless efforts to help your fellow country men, women and children, and by all of the wonderful volunteers who’s selfless acts brought a glimmer of hope and a smile to a tear streaked face….under such daunting circumstances…I am in tears again as I say one more time and I will keep saying it…thank you from my heart…I pray that a miracle can occur..that the land stays stable in and around Japan..but I see so many quakes there in any given day, that my prayers are ongoing for your safety and peace of mind especially with the nuclear reactors still very very unstable…I don’t know what I will take to make this all right..but I do know you jason ans Socks for Japan will always be remembered with deep gratitude and much love…

    Very sincerely, Wendy and Cookie cat xoxoxoxoxoxox

  9. Jennie and Ross
    Posted March 12, 2013 at 1:58 am | Permalink

    Jason,
    Greetings from Australia.
    Who is helping these people two years on? Who can take up the challenge?
    Thanks Jason and Helpers!

  10. Donald Pesavento Jr
    Posted March 12, 2013 at 12:22 am | Permalink

    Mr. Kelly, you and your team really did make a difference, and we applaud you. On top of that, your elegance in the communication of your story reaches out to bring us to Japan in spirit. Please continue these humanitarian efforts into the future.

  11. Michaiah Drescher
    Posted March 12, 2013 at 12:01 am | Permalink

    Wonderful work everyone. All things aside, there are still good men and women in this world. It’s incredible to think of how much everyone, including myself, take for granted. I can’t remember ever crying over socks. Great news. God Bless.

  12. George H Yama, M. D.
    Posted March 11, 2013 at 10:06 pm | Permalink

    Great speech, great project, great results. Much thank you from all of America that is still not p0litically correct or entitlement governed.
    Japan is a great ally, and their sense of morality (mores) should be an inspiration to this Country Today, and may our politicians, especially the Federal Government, learn, and learn quickly.
    But most of all, you make America proud.
    Thank you.



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