August 2003What goes up
Well, boys and girls, my summer tales kick off with me flying out from Tokushima Airport
and into the city of cities on Friday July 25, my brother's birthday. I had to wear my
suit onto the plane to make sure I could fit enough clothes for two weeks in Tokyo into
my bags. I even packed my "jutte" - like a little metal prong, one of my Awa Odori
accessories - to make sure I could get some practice in for the approaching dancing
season. No sooner was I off the plane in Haneda than I was onto the monorail and off
to the Australian Embassy in Akabanebashi to meet the Australia-Japan Foundation's Junko
Sato.
I didn't have to be in Tokyo until the next day, really, for the start of the JET Programme
Orientation, but I turned up on Friday to meet Junko and put the finishing touches on a
workshop we were to present together at the orientation. Working with Junko was refreshing.
She's a striking 30-year-old, warm and interesting, a former English teacher who decided
she wanted a change of career and went for it. Many Japanese women are panicking to get
married at 30, but Junko is enjoying her not-so-stable life. We chatted over lunch (eel,
surprisingly tasty) and dinner (tuna sashimi, always nice) and hit it off quickly. The
three workshops we presented over the next fortnight, all on the same theme of "Kulcha in
the Klassroom", were very well received. I hope I get to work with Junko again some time.
Once the orientation itself got underway on Saturday afternoon, the next 11 days went by in
a blur of new faces, welcomes, drinking, seminars, karaoke, late night help desk shifts and
little sleep. Hosted at one of Tokyo's most expensive venues, the Keio Plaza Hotel, Tokyo
Orientation welcomes 3000 new JETs in two batches on consecutive weekends. It's an exercise
in organisational mayhem that a little part of me would like to be in charge of one day!
Being one of over 100 volunteer JETs acting as staff and doubling as an AJET representative
gave me a great insight into the mechanics of the JET Programme. I was also pleased that
the AJET Pocket Guide, edited by yours truly, was well received by everybody. When I wasn't
at the Keio, I managed to hit Tokyo Disneyland with the AJET team, see a couple of movies,
stay at a capsule hotel for the first time (bit small for me!), buy a new digital camera, and
knock back a couple of VB stubbies in good company at the Australian Embassy. Top fortnight!
Flying back to Tokushima with the new JETs on Wednesday August 6, I made a stop on the way home
for Awa Odori practice before finally pulling into Iya at 10:30 that night. Besides for getting
some much-needed rest, next on my agenda was heading down to Kochi city on Shikoku's south coast
for their big freestyle summer dance festival, Yosakoi. A typhoon was planning to visit Kochi
that weekend, too, but thankfully it came and went quickly, leaving a beautiful day for taking
in the dancing. Piling into a little 4-wheel drive with my principal and another young male
teacher for company, we zipped down the highway and arrived in the city centre by 2pm, just in
time to catch the the arcade parade.
Hustling through the crowd to get a good vantage, the first thing to hit me was the noise, a
cacophony of competing rhythms echoing down the arcade, accompanied by the occasional shouts of
dancers and the clack of "naruko" castanets. Then it was the huge floats leading each team -
brightly decorated trucks decked out with speakers, some even with live performers, variously
blaring rock, pop or traditional music as dancers came running along behind. Yosakoi dancing
teams are only limited by two rules - the use of a certain traditional phrase in otherwise
freely arranged music, and the use of "naruko" as dancing accessories. The festival itself
is therefore a truly entertaining mix of traditional and modern Japanese culture.
The dancers themselves came down the arcade in rows of 4, each team with its own style of summer
kimono, everyone wielding "naruko", some people dancing with large banners or lanterns. Once
I'd taken in the spectacle, I settled down to marvel at the energy shown by some young teams,
the smiles on their faces as they went, and the amount of practice it must have taken to get
200 people dancing in choreographed unison. There was a stage show as well in the evening, which
was more of the same. The only thing I hated about the day was that I couldn't join in!
Awa Odori, on the other hand, is something that anyone can do at the drop of a hat, and Yosakoi
reminded me that it was my turn to dance down the street in just a few days' time. My group,
Minoda-ren, wasn't due to start its program until the 14th, so I had a chance to go to Tokushima
city and check out the professionals on the 13th. Every man and his dog wanted a ticket to the
professional exhibition at the Cultural Hall, but we got in line early and managed to pick some
up at the last minute. And it was sensational! I left the performance all fired up for the next
day's action and thinking about joining a big group next year.
Unfortunately, though the weatherman had proclaimed Japan's rainy season finished, the clouds opened
in the evening of the 13th and didn't close again until late the next day. We got some dancing in
during the afternoon, albeit on a wet stage, and several other groups came to join the fun, but
that evening's dancing was cancelled all over Tokushima. When the next morning dawned cloudy but
rainless, we got stuck straight into making up for the lost day by dancing around Miyoshi town all
morning, in front of businesses, gas stands, homes, and care facilities, as an exercise in thanking
the locals for their support throughout the year. We also got our fill of stage and street dancing
over the next two days. I even broke my dancing lantern - too keen! What started as a potentially
miserable Awa Odori season ended up a little ripper. Come on 2004!
Out of my yukata and into the Pajero Mini for the drive to Kamiita for my third (and last?) summer
English Camp for high school students and new ALTs. I arrived late and was already going on little
sleep as it was, but had to get up early and put on a genki face for the students on Sunday morning.
I was assigned to the Sudachi Samurai, a group of younger students and fresh-faced ALTs who needed
some direction, so there was no rest for the wicked. Straight into preparing for the students' Monday
skit - in English, of course. They chose to sing an English song, Country Roads, so we went to work
changing a few of the lyrics to match our local area. They did us proud in their performance!
After a long few days on the road, I was well on my way to a bout of the cold by the time I got home
on Monday afternoon. Luckily, I didn't have to go into school for very long during the week, so I
recovered and backed up for one last weekend of JET Programme fun in Kamiyama, the annual homestay
and welcome party. Not many JETs do more than one homestay, but the people of Kamiyama are always
welcoming and I was looking forward to doing my third. Kamiyama is located on the other side of
Tokushima's tallest mountain from me, so I decided to take the scenic route straight over the mountain
instead of driving around as I have in the past.
Everything was fine until I came to an impassable road block for construction on the main road half way
down the other side of the mountain. It was one of those days where you take some tiny winding detour
up a hill and start wondering if you'll ever come back down. Sure enough, the Pajero Mini was up to
the task, and I got into central Kamiyama right on time, feeling like I'd had my adventure even before
the weekend had started!
I was taken in by the Hayashi family that night - the mother a kindy teacher, the father a builder, and
their twin 12-year-old boys. The boys are quite big for Japanese kids and very friendly, but they have
a learning problem and dislike study so much that they don't go to school very often. I gather this is
a growing problem in Japan. Fortunately, their parents are loving and patient, and the boys are tutored
by university students every week. We played card and video games together, went bowling, sang karaoke,
and did some indigo dyeing (one of Tokushima's famous products). I'm glad to have yet another family
I can call on when I next visit Kamiyama.
So finally I find myself here at the computer with time to write about the summer now past, thinking about
the lessons I need to plan for the start of the new school term next week, and wondering if I'll see out
another summer in Japan or if I'll be back in Australia by this time in 2004. My time in Tokyo made me
think seriously about investigating work opportunities there, for example at the Australian Embassy. Awa
Odori made me remember why I love Tokushima. And my brother's birthday at the start of the summer,
followed by my mother's just yesterday as I returned from Kamiyama, made me think of home. It's a bit hard
to work it out just now. I finish many of my missives with musings about the future. Will I still be
writing these stories in 12 months?
For now, I can confidently say that I'll be back in Australia again this Christmas. Not sure if I'll organise
a big outing again, but I'm certainly looking forward to being home and seeing my loved ones. That's about
the time I'll be looking to plot my course for the next couple of years. Hope to see you then.
Love,
Dave
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