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Tokyo Disaster Prevention

[Koedo Itabashi] April 16, 2016 18:00

"Okay,"

Yeah. That's all?

Where are you now and what kind of situation are you?

Are you at work? Are you on your way home? Did you return to the hotel?

Water, food, electricity, gas?

There's a shortage of information just because it's okay!

 

On April 14, a series of Kumamoto-Kyushu earthquakes from night.

I thought my eldest son was in Hakata, and when I emailed worried, I was on a business trip to Kumamoto.

If you send an email again to let us know the situation, there is no response.

Only one word was finally returned.

"Really ... I only knew it was a situation where I could send e-mails.'

 

The next day, I purchased the disaster prevention book "Tokyo Disaster Prevention" at a bookstore.

Edited and published by the Disaster Prevention Management Division, General Disaster Prevention Department, Tokyo Metropolitan Government.

There are a variety of cooperation and sources, including the Tokyo Fire Department.

I knew the existence of the book.

Black letters on yellow ground.

"Let's do it now. Everything to protect yourself from disasters. Tokyo Disaster Prevention

In the past, even when I picked it up, I returned it to the original shelf saying "I almost know what I knew."

Now, I was driven by the impulse to read back and turned the page at once.

The summary is summarized in an easy-to-understand manner.

In the "Review Quiz", knowledge is devised so that the body can be further penetrated.

Price, 130 yen plus consumption tax.

The content that is so valuable is compactly woven, and it is excellent.

Sticky notes were attached to the life reconstruction support system and disaster response yellow pages.

 

From Yurakucho Station, head toward Ginza and head to Sukiyabashi intersection.

"KOBAN" made of pointed roof and brick is Tsukiji Police Station Sukiyabashi police box.

At the end of the sidewalk, there is a statue "Lighthouse" by Seibo Kitamura.

It is a work filled with the power of a young man wearing a helmet and raising a torch to obey the lion.

It was installed as a memorial tower 10 years after the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923.

On the pedestal, the slogan "Preparation for unexpected earthquakes" is written.

 

It leads to the words of Torahiko Terada, "Natural disasters come when you forget them."

At that time, I want to make full use of my knowledge and be prepared to move my body.