Wakayama AJET (WAJET) Store features designs by talented artist Caroline Jackson

Wakayama AJET (WAJET) plans social events throughout the year to bring together the JETs in this prefecture and friends in the larger JET community. Please support us by purchasing official Wakayama gear at our new Cafepress store! With a beautiful 2012 logo design by Caroline Jackson, and a photo calendar with submissions from many talented WAJET artists and photographers, we hope you enjoy our mikan-inspired merchandise! WAJET receives a $1 donation on every purchase, which is used for events and official supplies only.

To visit the WAJET store click here.

The Shikoku Field Day Event

By Lisa Cross, AJET Block 8 Representative.

Shikoku is comprised of four beautiful prefectures, Ehime, Kagawa, Kochi and Tokushima. Shikoku is home of the famous 88th temple of pilgrimage, a vibrant community spirit and its natural scenic beauty.

The Shikoku Field Day is the main Block Eight event of the year. The event is open to the entire block and beyond for the purpose of coming together and having lots of fun while forming and maintaining friendships. The event is also supported by all the prefectures on Shikoku.

The Field Day is a one-day (overnight optional) gathering of Shikoku-ites and their friends to play games more focused on fun than competition. The games followed by a barbecue will take place at Shikoku Saburo no Sato, in Mima City, Tokushima Prefecture, on the afternoon of Saturday, November 26th afterward; attendees can stay the night in a tent or a cottage and participate in the evening’s ongoing revelries, or head back home.

The event will give you the opportunity to relive some of your childhood memories. Remember when there was a time in our childhood when we didn’t play for results, there was no tournament bracket, no championship round, no record-keeping and sometimes there weren’t even any points. You just showed up, played hard, had lots of fun and went home.

Many of the day’s games are taken from the New Games Movement of the 1970s. No prior knowledge of the rules is required to participate. Exciting games may include; capture the flag, catch the dragon’s tail, bola, slaughter, caterpillar and rock-paper-scissors. In keeping with the spirit of the event, teams will be randomly determined on the day and distinguished by bandanas (provided), which will have the side effect of making participants look totally great. Awards will be given, but not all of them will be for winning. Some awards will have inherently magical properties.

Shikoku Field Day promises to be an exciting and unpredictable day to remember! Eat, drink, play, and be merry. Looking forward to a fun filled day!

Bi-annual ALT Soccer Tournament

This year’s bi-annual ALT hosted soccer tournament, Japan’s biggest foreign footie tournament, will be hosted on November 19th and 20th, in Awaji Island, Hyogo Prefecture for Western Japan, and on October 1st and 2nd on Sugadaira Kogen, Nagano Prefecture for Eastern Japan. The tournament features an 11 vs 11 format for men, and 6 v 6 for women. Supporters are also welcome, and can purchase a package which includes lodging, food, charity raffle tickets, entrance to the party, and bus shuttle fees, for a paltry ¥15000 for both days. You can check out the website and find more information here. Be sure to check out the Facebook page as well at this link.

2011 Iwamizawa International Mini Festival

NorwayWarm greetings from Iwamizawa, Hokkaido. With one of the highest concentrations of JET participants in Hokkaido, the Iwamizawa and many other JET participants living on the island along with their families and friends have been organising the Iwamizawa International Mini Festival for the past 5 years. The goal of this event is to foster awareness of Iwamizawa’s cultural diversity and is a logical extension of the JET Programme’s aim for local internationalisation. Every year, with an average of 250 people in attendance and it has become one of the most successful international events in the city.
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Day before graduation ceremony – Leaving paper cranes

An English translation, by Hiroyuki Ueba, Staff Writer at The Yomiuri Shimbun, and Mayumi Nakamura, International Relations Coordinator at Randolph Macon-College.

“I will never forget you!”

I will never forget you

A message Ms. Anderson wrote to her students who graduated.

A message hand-written by Taylor Anderson, a 24-year-old assistant language teacher, is displayed along with the names of 67 graduating students on the wall of a hallway at Inai Middle School in Ishinomaki City, Miyagi Prefecture. Paper cranes that she made were also attached.

Born and raised in Virginia, USA, Taylor got attracted to the rhythm of the Japanese language after watching the Japanese anime film “Tonari no Totoro (My Neighbor Totoro)” and decided to go to Japan in 2008, which led her to teach English at six primary and middle schools in Ishinomaki City. She stated in her application for the Japan Exchange and Teaching Programme that she wanted to make connections between young students in Japan and foreign countries.

Taylor had taught those students at Inai Middle School who graduated last month since their freshman year. One of her students Ikumi Kimura, 15, reflected that “As she even told us about her fiancé back in the US, she was like a friend at the same time as our teacher.”

According to her fellow teacher at Inai Middle School, Ms. Tomoko Narusawa, as the day of the graduation ceremony was approaching, Taylor stayed alone in the office after work to fold paper cranes for the graduating students.

When the earthquake took place on March 11th, Taylor was teaching at another primary school in the city. After helping her students safely evacuate, she tried to return to her apartment by bicycle, which was when she appeared to have been swamped by the tsunami.

“Taylor said she would marry her fiancé after returning home in July,” Ikumi said. She still cannot believe Taylor’s death. When she visited the school with her friends late last month, she found Taylor’s message on the wall. “I’m so moved by how much she cared us.”

SOURCE: Yomiuri Online (In Japanese)