March 12: The First Meal After the Earthquake / Emergency Food Distribution 17 “The people serving the food were warm, too.”

 

This article introduces the sticky notes visitors contributed and shows what the panels looked like during the exhibition period of “March 12: The First Meal After the Earthquake ––– When, Where, and What Did You Eat?” For the summary of each exhibited panel, please check out the [INDEX] page.

 

About “March 12: The First Meal After the Earthquake”
About sticky note comments

 

[Fall 2014] Exhibited Panel

 

Exhibition Period: October 1st to November 16th, 2014
Venue: Sendai Mediatheque

 

 

 

 

 

Comments by Visitors about the Panels

Some comments are not directly related to the photo content or location.

 

▷On 3/18, the people from Nagano came to a nearby elementary school to serve food. I’m very grateful for the curry, gyudon, and tonjiru they provided!

▷Eating sweet buns every day

▷In the middle of the blackout, I felt truly grateful for warm food. The people serving the food were warm, too.

 

About sticky note comments

People from many different backgrounds visited this exhibition, including people from Sendai City, as well as people from everywhere, including coastal areas, inland areas, inside and outside of Miyagi Prefecture, and inside and outside of Japan. There were also both adults and children, and these people left comments on sticky notes about what they remembered from seeing exhibited photos at the time of the disaster. Here, the original text comments that were left are posted without editing. Also, English text in gray are translations of Japanese texts.

 

 

Original Photo

“Soup from Emergency Food Distribution”

 

March 12th, 2011
Taihaku Ward, Sendai City, Miyagi Prefecture
Recorded by KATO Naomi7

 

*Source:
Photo Collection “3.11 Record of Memory—3.11 Disaster that Citizens Took as Record of Memory—”
Issued and provided by: 20th Century Archive Sendai

 

 

 

About “March 12: The First Meal After the Earthquake ––– When, Where, and What Did You Eat?”

The project is a participation style exhibition that exhibits photos of “meals” at the time of the disaster, such as photos related to emergency food distribution, grocery shopping, and people sharing meals at a table. Visitors were free to write sticky notes about what they remembered after seeing the photos and how they lived at the time. This exhibition was planned collaboratively by 3.11 Archive of Memories (at the time, called 20th Century Archive Sendai) and the center for remembering 3.11 (recorder311).
Please check out the [INDEX] page for the summary of each exhibited panel and utilization/application examples.