Relief news update from Japan - 24 Mar 2011  
email to friend  اینرا به دوست خود ایمیل کنید   If you want to add this video in your blog or on your personal home page, Please click the fallowing link to copy source code  copy source code   Print

Supreme Master Ching Hai International Association relief news update from Japan.
Nearly two weeks after the world’s fourth-largest ever earthquake and enormous tsunami on March 11, Japan’s northeastern region continues to be rocked by aftershocks. The official toll of dead and missing rose to over 25,000 on Wednesday, March 23. With more than 14,700 buildings demolished, many survivors who had been rendered homeless are now staying in their cars to escape overcrowded shelters, where over 260,000 people were still taking refuge as of Tuesday evening.

With aid distribution slowed due to fuel shortages as well as debris and destroyed roads, many still lack food, water, medical care, and other essential needs. Having followed the situation with sorrowful concern since the initial disaster impact, Supreme Master Ching Hai has donated US$80,000, sending her love and prayers.

She also asked that our Association members, including doctors and nurses, go help the victims, including bringing urgent necessities such as medicine especially to the elderly and young. With contributions from our international Association members, the donation now totals more than US$110,000.

Immediately after the disaster, our Association members began working in several teams to render aid to Japan. A team in South Korea has already prepared 4,500 relief kits including clothes, stockings, undergarments, diapers, and other necessities. These were shipped to Tokyo for our Association members
there to distribute immediately upon arrival.

In Japan, a relief team comprising our Association members from Japan and Formosa (Taiwan) divided into groups. As telecommunications were still downed, one group travelled to Miyagi Prefecture to assess the situation and report back to the other staying in Tokyo to prepare the needed items.

Correspondent (M): Before, did you have a hard time to receive relief goods?

Mr. Okamoto, Manager of Relief Goods Procurement, Disaster Countermeasures Center, Otsuchi Town (M): Yes. The victims taking shelter here are still worrying about it most. So I think that the priority is to make goods, especially food, delivered all around as soon as possible, so that they will o longer be insecure.

Mr. Okamoto (M): The number of undergarments is extremely insufficient. 6,500 or 6,100 people are taking shelter here now, while others are seeking refuge at home. So, if we could receive more undergarments, it would be better. Also, the sooner, the better. Please help us. I thank you in advance.

Correspondent (M): Our members have started preparing what exactly is needed by the victims to dispatch.

Mr. Okamoto (M): Thank you very much.

VOICE: With information about what was needed, our Association members got in touch with the team in Tokyo to bring the supplies as soon as possible. Meanwhile, as many residents who had left Tokyo following the disaster begin to return home, fears of radiation from the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant are still high,with affected areas such as tap water, which is still registering radioactive iodine at levels higher than the safe limit for infants.

The Tokyo Metropolitan government told people to use bottled water when preparing food or drinks for infants, but urged residents not to hoard them, and pledged to provide mineral water to about 80,000 households with babies.

On Wednesday, atmospheric radiation levels in many eastern and northern prefectures remained slightly above normal, including Fukushima as well as Yamagata, Tochigi, Gunma, Saitama, and Tokyo.

In Fukushima city, where the highest levels were recorded, health officials stated that one hour of exposure to the radiation there would equal 1/100th the radiation received in a single stomach x-ray.

As a precautionary measure, the Japanese government extended a ban on certain leafy vegetables to now include broccoli, cauliflower, and turnips, which are not allowed to be shipped from Fukushima for the time being due to radiation contamination, although officials say they do not pose immediate health risks.

Shipments of parsley and raw milk from neighboring Ibaraki were likewise suspended and consumers were urged not to eat those products. The US Food and Drug Administration has meanwhile imposed a temporary ban on imports of dairy products and fresh produce from Fukushima, Gunma, Ibaraki, and Tochigi prefectures.
At the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, workers continued risking exposure to high radiation levels as they worked to cool the overheating reactors and prevent a catastrophic radiation leak.

On Wednesday, reactor No. 3 became the first of the most troubled reactors 1 through 4 to have electricity to have its control room restored and lights switched on, which will allow for more intensive work to curb the crisis.

However, operators must limit their stay in the rooms due to high radiation levels and periodic power outages. According to Kyodo news agency, two workers were injured Wednesday while restoring power to reactor No. 1, with another setback occurring when its temperature briefly spiked above 400 degrees Celsius, with large amounts of seawater being pumped in to cool it down.

Also on Wednesday,plant workers had to temporarily evacuate when black smoke was seen rising from reactor No. 3.

Contamination levels were reported to be unusually high before the smoke was seen at the nuclear plant. They later dropped, but were still higher than the past several days.

We are thankful for all the assistance from around the globe to Japan. Our deep gratefulness also for Supreme Master Ching Hai’s attentive care for the disaster victims, as well as our Association’s relief teams  for their selfless endeavors.

With sincere sympathies for the precious lives lost, we pray that Heaven may grace the Japanese people with faith and resolve as they strive to recover the regularity of daily life and that such tragedies subside as humanity turns to more benevolent, Earth-protective ways.  


Supreme Master Ching Hai : So, how is it that animals are helping us to reach the Golden Era?

It is through their unconditional benevolent love and merciful nature - I’m sure you know this, or at least you feel it - and their absolute forgiveness, no matter what humanity has done to them. for example the whales, in Âu Lạc (Vietnam), the big whales that rescue the fishermen in Âu Lạc (Vietnam), they do know that these are fishermen. They do know that they kill fish for a living, but they still rescue them at sea when the fishermen are in danger.

Absolutely unconditional, non-judgmental. This is the love that we humans also house in our heart, but we have suppressed it, because the substances that we took into our body don’t help us to develop more of our divinity, but on the contrary, destroy it, or at least suppress it, damage it. So now, we have to reclaim it again.  

The animals,for all the generosity of spirit and blessings that they bring into our lives, how do we have the heart to kill them, and eat them, to enjoy their suffering?

On one hand, yes, it is alarming to see so many crises erupting one after another But if we stop to remember what our religions have taught us and what our scientific observation shows us, these problems are not without their causes. It's all about the energy. Negative or positive, like energy attracts like energy.

From this viewpoint, we see that we have produced a lot, a lot, and a lot of negative energy by killing billions and billions of innocent sentient lives, and killing millions of our fellow humans even, over millennia, directly or indirectly.

It is not a coincidence that the main cause of global warming is meat eating. So, in order to go toward a positive destination for ourselves and the planet, all we have to do is change the direction.

Be vegan, make peace with one another and our co-inhabitants, create peace, emanate compassion, then the future will be peaceful and we will never have to suffer many of these kinds of consequences ever, ever again.