Okinawa Prefecture Governor Denny Tamaki offers his thoughts as he folded a paper crane, “Let’s hold this in memory.” (22no22)
Splendor of Okinawa: Wishbone flower, roadside Uruma, 22no22
In offering his thoughts as he folded a paper crane, Okinawa Prefecture Governor Denny Tamaki quipped, “Let’s hold this in memory as the G7 Hiroshima Summit Paper-Crane Folding Campaign!”
Governor Tamaki was born to an American father and an Okinawan mother. After stints as a radio personality, House of Representatives member, and other posts, he was elected Okinawa Prefecture Governor in 2018 and is now serving his second term.
Okinawa Prefecture Governor Denny Tamaki spoke about his experience seeing paper-crane folding in Okinawa, “Was it at the Peace Cornerstone or at the Peace Memorial Park? But it’s the same at Himeyuri (trans. Note: monument to the forced suicide of Himeyuri Girl’s High and Teachers School). Lots of people fold paper cranes and leave them. It’s a way for visitors to leave their thoughts of peace, and a great many people come to do it.
What’s important is that, one by one, the cranes are lovingly folded. Chimu-gukurou (Ryukyuan: heart to heart) is a phrase used between people in Okinawa to show tender thoughts. With just such tender thoughts, in order for me to create peace, so that you may certainly have peace too, I want us to do our best to be together. It’s that feeling I’ve folded into my crane, along with what’s written there, ‘May we have peace from our Chimu-gukuru.”
“Let’s request peace among us. You may ask what process is necessary to follow up on it. Once again, leaders of every nation must sincerely lay out their opinions together. I would like our message of peace linked to reality to be announced to the whole world.”
Hiroshima TV feels it would like to receive folded paper cranes to bring thoughts of peace to as many people as possible. For those of you who have forgotten how to fold cranes, we have published a video called “How to fold a crane.” You can watch it by accessing the QR Code that appears on your cell phone screen.
Original Japanese article: Hiroshima TV Broadcasting, Monday 21 November 2022 at 21:45
https://news.yahoo.co.jp/articles/536911152bc640870df074e977f6b69120d3e697
Denny in the News: news about Governor Denny Tamaki.
Denny Tamaki is the governor of Okinawa Prefecture in Japan. Although Okinawa is important as an international tourist destination and a key element in strategic US Military Forces, its governor receives very little coverage in the Japanese press and almost none in the English language media.
This blog hopes to translate one news article a day on the governor. It is unsponsored and unauthorized. The translator simply hopes to improve his skills and perhaps give the governor an English speaking audience.
Any suggestion on improving the translation will be gratefully accepted. However, please leave political comments for another forum.
Where they occur, words and phrases in Ryukyuan (the Okinawan language) are rendered in italics and translated in parentheses. Names whose readings are uncertain are rendered as Name (=Kanji?) as in Nagayuki (=長行?). Any corrections in such instances would be gratefully appreciated.
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