The March 11, 2011, earthquake and subsequent tsunami that ravaged Japan
lasted a mere six minutes. But the fallout--the aftershocks, the
Fukushima nuclear disaster, the country-wide devastation--from this
catastrophic event and the trauma experienced by those who survived it
is ongoing, if not permanent.
In Ganbare! Workshops on Dying, Polish writer and reporter Katarzyna
Boni takes us on a journey through the experience of death and how the
living--those of us left behind--learn to grieve. In Ganbare!, some
learn how to scuba-dive for the sole purpose of recovering their loved
one's remains; some compile foreign-language dictionaries of
"prohibited," tsunami-related words so they don't have to think of them
in their mother tongue; many believe in the lingering presence of the
ghosts of those whom the wave claimed for itself. Whatever their
methods, whatever their mechanisms, whatever their degree of success,
the survivors Boni gives voice to in Ganbare! provide an intimate,
soul-aching, and above all human look at how people come to deal with
loss, trauma, and death.