Yoko and Nowa in the old part of Mizusawa |
July and we’re back in Mizusawa, as regularly as
migrating birds, every summer for many years already. This is Yoko’s hometown
and I’ve grown to feel it’s mine as well. Nowa has spent most of her summers and some New Year's vacations there too.
I’ve also watched it change, both
economically, socially and geographically. Mizusawa has some history, although
it’s short by Japanese standards where history is measured in centuries and
millennia: the town was founded in 1889 and made formally into a city in 1954.
But by now, Mizusawa is no longer a city in its own right. In 2006 it
was merged with the neighboring communities of Esashi, Maesawa, Isawa and
Koromogawa to form the new city of Oshu. The former cities (shi) were downgraded to the status of
wards (ku) in the newly formed
Oshu-shi. It probably made sense in some administrative manner. Life in
Mizusawa didn’t change noticeably and the old Mizusawa city hall close to our
house was turned into Oshu city hall.
Our house |
We are in Iwate prefecture (ken) in the middle of the Tohoku region in the northern part of the
main Japanese island of Honshu. Oshu-shi is almost 500 km straight north from
Tokyo. It is located in a north-south valley, with the tall mountains of Akita-ken rising to the west. A coastal mountain range separates the area from
the Sanriku coast further to the east. This is very lucky as the Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami of March 11th, 2011, that destroyed many of the coastal towns, such as Rikuzentakata, Ofunato, Kamaishi and Kesennuma,
killed more than 15,000 people, and caused the Fukushima nuclear meltdown,
hardly affected Mizusawa’s surroundings. Sure, the massive shakes were felt
here strong enough and electricity was cut off for two weeks in parts of the town, but that was the
extent of the damage.
Mizusawa was a small town, at least by Japanese
standards. It used to have a bit over 60,000 inhabitants when it was put together with its neighbors. It is a center of an agricultural area with expansive
tracts of rice paddies, apple orchards and vegetable gardens. Consequently,
many of the inhabitants are rural types and the age structure rather old.
Although Iwate (like Akita) has plenty of hot springs, the main resort areas –
like the famous Hanamaki Onsen – are further north from Mizusawa, in the mountains. Mizusawa
did have some things going for it, though, that made it different from some of
the other small rural towns. It was an administrative center for the region and
it had a big hospital.
Small rivers and canals run through the old part of town. Some houses along them are old and somewhat dilapidated but new ones are appearing here and there. The waterways are generally clean and there are fish and crayfish in the main channel. Some beautiful gardens line the creeks.
Rural outskirts |
Urban canals |
Interestingly, the town is also host to one of the six International Latitude Observatories, which has for decades brought visiting scholars and scientists to the town from all over the world. All these observatories – in California, Ohio, Maryland, Italy, Turkmenistan and Mizusawa – are located near the 39o08’ parallel to measure the Earth’s wobble. You can still go for days without seeing another foreigner, but at least people are quite used to seeing my kind of big blond gaijin in town. This summer, there are three American kids enrolled in the Mizusawa elementary school.
The shinkansen station |
Oshu-shi lies about halfway between the two largest
cities in Tohoku: Sendai (pop. 1.1 million) to the south and Morioka (pop.
297,000) to the north. The main Tohoku shinkansen
bullet train track goes through Oshu-shi and makes a stop at the
Mizusawa-Esashi station. Some people are surprised that the shinkansen makes a
stop at the juncture of these relatively small towns, but there is a logical explanation: Ichiro Ozawa (b. 1942). The perennial opposition leader and powerful politician
actually hails from Mizusawa and remains quite popular in these parts. Even we
received a congratulatory message from him when we got married at the Komagata
shrine here in town (this didn’t please my mother-in-law who was a regional
planner in the prefectural government and no fan of Ozawa’s). In a type example
of politics of patronage, Mizusawa received a shinkansen stop.
A ceremony at Komagata shrine |
There’s a twist to the story, however – a twist that explains some of the later developments in the urban geography of the area. Mizusawa is also on the regular north-south railway line on which the local trains to Morioka and smaller towns in Iwate travel. Naturally, the original plan was to build the Tohoku shinkansen line so that it would take the same route and the bullet trains would stop at around the existing Mizusawa station. The station area at that time was the heart of the city, with a thriving main street containing many shops and restaurants and a couple of hotels. Apparently the chamber of commerce feared that a shinkansen station would disturb their idyll and voted against it. Instead, the shinkansen would stop some kilometers further east, in a relatively unpopulated area between the cities of Mizusawa and Esashi.
How wrong could they have been? What happened was that
the area around the new shinkansen station started to develop, as many people
preferred to live close to the transportation hub that would take them to
Morioka, Sendai and all the way to Tokyo. The area around Mizusawa station
declined and shops started closing.
Universe -- A new shopping center |
In a parallel development, Mizusawa became much more
car-oriented. The old center with its narrow streets was made for walking and
biking. Now shopping centers with expansive parking lots were developed on the
outskirts of the town. The outer roads turned into strip malls with car
dealerships, pachinko parlors with slot machines, chain restaurants and other
establishments. The best hotel in town is no longer the Mizusawa Grand on the
main station street (where our wedding reception was held) but the MizusawaPlaza Inn to the east from the local train tracks. Full disclosure: Plaza Inn
is owned and operated by one of Yoko's best friends, Mami Kikuchi; the girls went to
junior high school together. The hotel is very popular as a wedding location
and boasts two excellent restaurants: a traditional Japanese restaurant
Kikusui; and the Western Quattre Saisons. (Typically of the modesty of the
Japanese people, the successful businesswoman Mami who in addition owns other
restaurants in Iwate still drives a tiny Suzuki Lapin.)
With Mami and her Lapin |
As in so many Japanese towns, there is a fancy multipurpose cultural center in Oshu-shi as well. The Z Hall that contains a large concert hall and hosts a variety of events (and where my brother-in-law Jun works) was also built to the east of the tracks towards Esashi.
There was a time a decade or so ago when it was rather
depressing to walk along the main street by the station, as so many of the
shops were closed down and very few people would be on the street. A large
number of small bars were still operating in the narrow small streets north of
the main drag but the evenings tended to feel rather lonely, while younger
people drove to the family restaurants in the shopping centers and strip malls.
Even the classic Takatoyo fish mongers moved further out.
Jun sings at Urara while Akira tends bar |
Then something seems to have happened again and the
area no longer feels dead. New shops and cafés have opened around the station,
as have big and shiny karaoke joints to compete with the rustic Urara, a
karaoke bar run by Yoko and Jun’s aunt Eiko and her husband Akira. One reason
may be the development of new housing and opening of a shopping center,
Universe, not far from the old center a stone’s throw from our house. The son
of the owner of a classic coffee shop, Rengaya, a couple of years ago opened a
stylish yet cozy café called Jazzrise, which boasts a great collection of jazz
vinyls. It has to be said, though, that the collection is no match to that in
Ray Brown, a jazz bar just a couple of blocks away from our house, which Yoko’s
uncle Toshikatsu, a keen jazz man, introduced me to.
The old station area has recovered somewhat |
Rural Japan is facing a serious problem of
depopulation and aging, with planners and researchers talking about ‘ghost
towns’ (my friend Brendan Barrett, a professor at Osaka University is one who
has written about the unfortunate phenomenon). Apart from the obvious social
problems and the declining services in rural areas, this has also serious
environmental consequences as old managed agricultural landscapes disintegrate
into abandonment. Somewhat counterintuitively, this even threatens biodiversity
as the rice-based agricultural and water management systems developed here over
millennia – known as satoyama – maintain
a rich and delicate balance between natural and human systems.
The main river has clean water, fish and crayfish |
The water is clean and abundant, the locally
produced food superior, and the climate pleasant (especially this summer when
many places in Japan have broken heat records and dozens of people have died as
a consequence – the new normal with climate change, I’m afraid – the somewhat
cooler and less moist air of Tohoku is a blessing).
Mizusawa still may not be a thrilling center of
excitement, but it is a good place to be. And it feels like home.
Tambo (rice paddy) art on the city edge |
No comments:
Post a Comment