By TOMOKO A. HOSAKA, Associated Press Tomoko A. Hosaka, Associated
Press – 1 hr 58 mins ago
FUDAI, Japan –
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110513/ap_on_re_as/as_japan_village_that_survived

In the rubble of Japan's northeast coast, one small village stands as
tall as ever after the tsunami. No homes were swept away. In fact,
they barely got wet.

Fudai is the village that survived — thanks to a huge wall once deemed
a mayor's expensive folly and now vindicated as the community's
salvation.

The 3,000 residents living between mountains behind a cove owe their
lives to a late leader who saw the devastation of an earlier tsunami
and made it the priority of his four-decade tenure to defend his
people from the next one.
His 51-foot (15.5-meter) floodgate between mountainsides took a dozen
years to build and meant spending more than $30 million in today's
dollars.

"It cost a lot of money. But without it, Fudai would have
disappeared," said seaweed fisherman Satoshi Kaneko, 55, whose
business has been ruined but who is happy to have his family and home
intact.

The floodgate project was criticized as wasteful in the 1970s. But the
gate and an equally high seawall behind the community's adjacent
fishing port protected Fudai from the waves that obliterated so many
other towns on March 11. Two months after the disaster, more than
25,000 are missing or dead.

"However you look at it, the effectiveness of the floodgate and
seawall was truly impressive," Fudai Mayor Hiroshi Fukawatari said.

Towns to the north and south also braced against tsunamis with
concrete seawalls, breakwaters and other protective structures. But
none were as tall as Fudai's.

The town of Taro believed it had the ultimate fort — a double-layered
33-foot-tall (10-meter-tall) seawall spanning 1.6 miles (2.5
kilometers) across a bay. It proved no match for the tsunami two
months ago.

In Fudai, the waves rose as high as 66 feet (20 meters), as water
marks show on the floodgate's towers. So some ocean water did flow
over but it caused minimal damage. The gate broke the tsunami's main
thrust. And the community is lucky to have two mountainsides flanking
the gate, offering a natural barrier.

The man credited with saving Fudai is the late Kotaku Wamura, a 10-
term mayor whose political reign began in the ashes of World War II
and ended in 1987.

But Wamura never forgot how quickly the sea could turn. Massive
earthquake-triggered tsunamis flattened Japan's northeast coast in
1933 and 1896. In Fudai, the two disasters destroyed hundreds of homes
and killed 439 people.
"When I saw bodies being dug up from the piles of earth, I did not
know what to say. I had no words," Wamura wrote of the 1933 tsunami in
his book about Fudai, "A 40-Year Fight Against Poverty."
He vowed it would never happen again.

In 1967, the town erected a 51-foot (15.5-meter) seawall to shield
homes behind the fishing port. But Wamura wasn't finished. He had a
bigger project in mind for the cove up the road, where most of the
community was located. That area needed a floodgate with panels that
could be lifted to allow the Fudai River to empty into the cove and
lowered to block tsunamis.

He insisted the structure be as tall as the seawall.
The village council initially balked.

"They weren't necessarily against the idea of floodgates, just the
size," said Yuzo Mifune, head of Fudai's resident services and an
unofficial floodgate historian. "But Wamura somehow persuaded them
that this was the only way to protect lives."
Construction began in 1972 despite lingering concerns about its size
as well as bitterness among landowners forced to sell land to the
government.
Even current Mayor Fukawatari, who helped oversee construction, had
his doubts.
"I did wonder whether we needed something this big," he said in an
interview at his office.

The concrete structure spanning 673 feet (205 meters) was completed in
1984. The total bill of 3.56 billion yen was split between the
prefecture and central government, which financed public works as part
of its postwar economic strategy.

On March 11, after the 9.0 earthquake hit, workers remotely closed the
floodgate's four main panels. Smaller panels on the sides jammed, and
a firefighter had to rush down to shut them by hand.

The tsunami battered the white beach in the cove, leaving debris and
fallen trees. But behind the floodgate, the village is virtually
untouched.

Wamura left office three years after the floodgate was completed. He
died in 1997 at age 88. Since the tsunami, residents have been
visiting his grave to pay respects.

At his retirement, Wamura stood before village employees to bid
farewell: "Even if you encounter opposition, have conviction and
finish what you start. In the end, people will understand."

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