Osamu Sekiguchi Journals
June 2, 1997
Location: Mitchell, Nebraska - Location: 41:56:25N 103:48:29W
Elevation: 3945 feet
Summary: Monday, June 2, 1997 (Cloudy / Rain) Mitchel 69.8F
Journal entry: [Translated by Tomoko Nakayama]
Altitude: 3833ft. Atmosphere pressure:
886pha.
There was an awful storm last night. It started to thunder from
around 10:00p.m. and all the scenery around us was light like midday.
It seemed as if the lightning would break the night sky. Rain fell
so loud, we couldn't hear ourselves in the tent. I was the only
one who worried if the water would come into the tent as my wife
and children slept soundly. When we started moving, it was cloudy,
but it started raining after a while. I tried to pitch the tent
while the rain had stopped, but in the end, water still got inside
the tent. This was the second time that the tent had sunk in water.
We had experienced being partially wet many times, but this was
the first time for us that water had flooded our tent an inch high.
It might have been very shocking if it had been the first time,
but instead, we calmly took pictures and video tapes.
When we arrived the town named Mitchell, two second generation
Japanese American old ladies came to see us. They knew about us
through the TV and the newspapers, and they had come all the way
to see us. The lady, whose name was Francis Kanno, she had lived
in Japan from age seven until she had graduated from girl's school,
so her Japanese was good. Tomoyo Yamada couldn't speak Japanese
very well, but she was a good-natured old lady. "Erakattadesho,"
Francis asked my children. They didn't understand the word, which
means "terrible" or "hard," so they wondered what she had meant.
"Dad, what did she say?" Koji asked me. I explained the word, but
since I was expalining a Japanese word in Japanese, it was a little
strange.
"I brought matsutake(mushroom) rice," Francis said.
"Matsutake rice!" we couldn't believe our ears . Even in Japan,
this would have been a special treat.
"I also have pickled plums." We were even more overjoyed.
I had never thought that I would be able to eat a pickled plum
in a place like this. The children stared at the Japanese food which
these old ladies had prepared for us. Tenpura of shungiku(a garland
chrysanthemum), tofu, seaweed, rice balls... all favorite Japanese
foods.
"We made this too, because we won't get another chance to meet
people making this kind of journey here,"said Tomoyo. It was red
beans rice.
"It is good to meet you like this place," Tomoyo continued with
kindly eyes.
"Dad, I want to eat red beans rice," my two children said eagerly.
It was splendid red beans rice. Rice was a little pinkish in color
and looked dry, but still it was great rice. I had been more than
a long time since I had eaten this. I timidly tried the rice. But
this red beans rice was splendid. The children stuffed their mouths,
while Takako ate quietly. I chewed the rice slowly, but with every
chew, I remembered various things about Japan. Tears came to my
eyes. I had never thought I would start to cry just by eating red
beans rice.
Japanese people who immigrated seemed to have hard and tough experiences
more than we can imagine. These two old ladies told us interestingly
stories about their past.
"You are great," they said many times, but I thought that these
two old ladies and other Japanese American people are greater. These
wonderful ladies were more Japanese than native Japanese people.
And more "pioneers" than we were.
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