Today is the 79th anniversary of the Tsushima-maru incident. After a hiatus of 4 years, a memorial service to pledge the remembrance of this heritage. (22au23)


Splendor of Okinawa: Rain Lily, roadside Uruma, 20au23


The Tsushima-maru was sunk by a US submarine in 1944, during World War ll. 1484 of the incident’s victims have been accounted for by name. 22 August marks the 79th anniversary of the sinking.


From 11 am today a memorial service will be held at the Tiny Cherry Blossoms Monument at Naha’s Asahi-ga-Oka Park in Wakasa to remember the school children and others lost in the incident. 


Words of condolence will be given by representative of the board of the Tsushima-maru Memorial Association, Masakatsu Takara. With their advancing age, the survivors and relatives of the victims are concerned about  memorializing the heritage of the incident.


Those involved will reflect on the preciousness of peace and broadcast, to those inside and outside Japan, their message of no more war. Governor Denny Tamaki and others will join the procession to the monument to offer their messages of condolence.


During Covid-19, attendance was reduced. However, after a hiatus of 4 years, the service will again be open to the general public as before. At the Tsushima-maru Museum in Naha, 2 new portraits of victims will be added.


On 21 August 1944, with 1788 evacuees on board, including school children, the Tsushima sailed from Naha Port bound for Kyushu. On the evening of 22 August, as the ship neared Akuseki Island in Kagoshima Prefecture, the ship was torpedoed and sunk in mid-course by the Bowfin, a US Navy submarine patrolling the area.


(Trans. note: Wikipedia lists 1788 as passengers and crew, of whom 254 survived. Of the 780 children among the passengers, only 59 survived.)

Original Japanese article: Ryukyu Shimpo, published Tuesday 22 August 2023 at 07:00.    
https://news.yahoo.co.jp/articles/5d9ef28a3e9fc6b6d4812ea96659fefa9868efd4


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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