2022-10-21 04:20

'Father of Oze' Legacy Lives on Today in Oze National Park

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https://featured.japan-forward.com/japan2earth/2022/10/1318/


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Susan Yoshimura

A US citizen based in Asia for over 20 years, Susan has a postgraduate degree in Environmental Education. She is a former environmental activist and media relations coordinator at Greenpeace Japan and research programme assistant at United Nations University, Tokyo. She has 15+ years experience in Japanese-to-English translation and editing in the environmental management field.


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00:00
Welcome to the SDGs in the News Podcast. This is Susan Yoshimura, Managing Editor of Japan 2 Earth, coming to you from Tokyo.
Today, we bring you another English article on Japan and the SDGs. You can find the full text on our website. Just click the link in the episode notes. Have a listen.
Father of Ose Legacy lives on today in Ose National Park. Hisa Yoshitakeda, the botanist who saved the rare and irreplaceable landscapes of Ose National Park from development, is remember 50 years after his death.
The marshland glows golden in the mist of the early morning sun. Hikers on the wooden boardwalks enjoy beautiful autumn scenery.
Ose National Park spans the four prefectures of Fukushima, Gunma, Tochigi, and Niigata. Its landscape encompasses the high moor of the Osa-gahara plateau and Lake Ozanuma. The surrounding mountains, bitter winter cold, and abundant water sources come together to create a unique landscape and a treasure trove of alpine flora.
While many may know of Ose, the man and botanist who protected it from development may not be so well known. The 50th anniversary of the death of Hisa Yoshitakeda has just passed.
Born in Tokyo as the second son of Ernest Sartoff, a British diplomat, Takeda was interested in plants and mountain climbing from a very young age. He went on to study botany in England and later was employed as a lecturer at the former Kyoto Imperial University and Hokkaido Imperial University.
He visited Ose for the first time in 1905 at the age of 22. He wrote in his travelogue, I was astonished by the incomparable scenery, I have never seen anything like it. Through his impassioned writing, he spread the name of Ose throughout the world.
Due to the abundance of water in Ose, proposals to develop hydroelectric power generation were repeatedly made during the first four decades of the 1900s.
When asked to cooperate with the local people to the project, Takeda signed on. He conducted scientific surveys and contributed to newspapers and magazines, repeatedly appealing to the rarity of the landscape, thereby preventing the construction of the dam. When the construction of an expressway was considered, Takeda objected.
For his ongoing protection of the landscape from the standpoint of a researcher, Takeda came to be known as the father of Ose. Ose also became known as the birthplace of the nature conservation movement in Japan.
Noriko Hirano, 81, third-generation caretaker of the Chozo Hut, a mountain lodge that worked together with Takeda to protect the mountain, remembers the last years of Takeda's life.
He had a rough side and was often blunt, but at heart he was a kind English gentleman, she reminisces. Ms Hirano fondly remembers how Takeda would pick up trash with the tip of his cane when he came to the site to conduct fixed-point surveys.
03:10
Half a century has passed since he saw Yoshi Takeda departed this world.
Spared from development, Ose now boasts roughly 65 kilometers of wooden boardwalks. Prior to the pandemic, approximately 250,000 people visited the area annually.
Although the increase in visitors has caused various issues, such as providing toilets and garbage disposal, Hirano believes that Takeda would be happy that more and more people have come to love Ose.
I hope that those who love Ose also continue to protect it and uphold the legacy of the father of Ose.
Signing off.
04:20

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