Japan Finds Story of Hope in Undertaker Who Offered Calm Amid Disaster
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/11/world/asia/a-year-later-undertakers-story-offers-japan-hope.html?_r=2&hp
By HIROKO TABUCHI
Published: March 10, 2012
KAMAISHI, Japan Amid the grief of finding her mothers body at a makeshift morgue in this tsunami-ravaged city last March, Fumie Arai took comfort in a small but surprising discovery. Unlike the rest of the muddied body, her mothers face had been carefully wiped clean.
Mrs. Arai did not know at the time, but the act was the work of a retired undertaker well-versed in the ancient Buddhist rituals of preparing the dead for cremation and burial. The undertaker, Atsushi Chiba, a father of five who cared for almost 1,000 bodies in Kamaishi, has now become an unlikely hero in a community trying to heal its wounds a year after the massive earthquake and tsunami that ravaged much of Japans northeastern coast a year ago Sunday.
I thought that if the bodies were left this way, the families who came to claim them wouldnt be able to bear it, Mr. Chiba said Thursday in an interview. Yes, they are dead. But in Japan, we treat the dead with respect, as if they are still alive. Its a way to comfort the living.
He also taught city workers at the morgue how to soothe limbs tense with rigor mortis, getting down on his knees and gently massaging them so the bodies looked less contorted. When the relatives of a middle-aged victim sobbed that her corpse looked gaunt, Mr. Chiba asked for some makeup and applied rouge and blush.