Fukushima Samurai, charcoal and acrylic on paper, 59 x 42 cm
This work continues my personal response to the events at TEPCO's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.
Tokyo Electric's President, Masataka Shimizu, was
too upset to apologize in person. The task of ritual apology,
whatever that is worth, was delegated further down the food-chain to Chairman Tsunehisa Katsumata.
Shimizu
rested, as
nameless neo-samurai - the
Fukushims 50 aka 'Atomic Samurai' - waded into radioactive waters, leaky protective gear failing to fend off the water-born radioactive isotopes soaking in round their ankles. Working in shifts of 50 at a time, Japan is hailing them as
heroes. Because they have already exceeded the allowable radiation dose deemed safe, the government sprang into action. Leak-proof hazmat suits? Nope. It simply
raised the legal maximum radiation dose.
When Shimizu did appear on TV to 'apologize', rather than accept a president's responsibility for his company's safety practices and contingency planning, he
blamed "marvels of nature that we have never experienced before" - like earth quakes and tsunamis
in Japan, i suppose.
I don't expect TEPCO executives to immolate themselves like the samurai of old as an honorable way out of their loss of face (and to avoid facing up to their failure). I'm not actually all that concerned about their sense of inadequacy. Rather, I'm concerned about the victims of the failed power-plant and of the ineffective remedial measures to contain the radiation to date.
I'm even concerned for the
1,000 tsunami dead whose bodies cannot be recovered in the radiation zone. And how do you cremate a radio-active corpse without creating further airborne contamination? How will they rest in peace?
But especially I'm concerned about the white hazmat-clad samurai working down in those dark tunnels. I wish the company's executives would poetically lead from the front. Pull on a
hazmat suit and climb down into those water-logged tunnels to turn whatever valves need turning. Share the
radioactive iodine, cesium and strontium with your nameless workers.
Now that would be accountability.
That would make an apology worth something.
To my weary eyes, that would be Samurai.