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Japan Picks Character for ‘Disaster’ as Symbol of 2018

Staff Writer by Staff Writer
12/12/18
in World
Japanese children with their parents

Japanese children. Photo: Toru Yamanaka, AFP

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Japan on Wednesday selected the character for “disaster” as its “defining symbol” for 2018, a year that saw the country hit by deadly floods, earthquakes, and storms.

Japanese TV stations broadcast the annual announcement live, with Seihan Mori, master of the ancient Kiyomizu temple in Kyoto, writing the character on a huge white panel with an ink-soaked calligraphy brush.

“Many people experienced the threat of natural disasters such as earthquakes, heavy rain, typhoons and heatwaves,” the Japan Kanji Aptitude Testing Foundation, which organizes the event, said in a press release.

At the end of every year, the general public votes for the character they think embodies the key news and events of the previous 12 months.

A total of 20,858 people out of 193,214 chose the character “disaster.”

Kanji of the year 災, meaning ‘disaster,’ symbolizes 2018 amid natural and human calamities https://t.co/NsilZeq4ST #今年の漢字 pic.twitter.com/9BjlSQ4NeX

— The Japan Times (@japantimes) December 12, 2018

The country was hit by a series of natural disasters in 2018, starting with massive flooding in western regions that killed over 200 people.

It was also battered by a typhoon that inundated a major international airport, and an earthquake in the north that triggered landslides and disrupted supply lines.

An “unprecedented” heatwave also struck the country over the summer, causing more than 150 deaths, with over 80,000 people hospitalized.

The series of disasters hit GDP, with the country’s economy shrinking in the three months to September.

“I was reminded of how scary natural disasters are,” said a 42-year-old woman from quake-battered northern Hokkaido, who was cited in a statement from the organizer.

“The power went out immediately after the quake and I spent days for the first time without electricity,” she said.

Last year, Japan picked “North” following a series of North Korean missile launches, and the year before the choice was “gold”, in celebration of the success of Japanese athletes at the Rio Olympics.

Chinese characters, or Kanji, are widely used in Japanese, along with other types of alphabets.

Japan’s Intake of Foreign Workers is Bandage to Chronically ill Society

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AFP with The Globe Post

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