Mabuni Sunflower Maze reminds visitors of Tohoku disaster

The sunflowers are now grown and the maze is open to visitors.

The sunflowers are now grown and the maze is open to visitors.

It has been eight years since the disaster of the Great Northeast Japan Earthquake and Tsunami and its following Fukushima nuclear power plant disaster took place. Okuma Town is one of the cities in the Fukushima Prefecture, the site of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station that was destroyed in the disaster. In the aftermath of the disaster, Fukushima Sunflower Project Committee was established to grow sunflowers in Fukushima Prefecture and send their seeds to other prefectures to remind and carry on memories of the disaster.

Local preschool children and the park staff planted the sunflowers in December.

Local preschool children and the park staff planted the sunflowers in December.

In Okinawa, sunflowers from those seeds area grown at the Okinawa Peace Memorial Park in Mabuni, Itoman City, and used to make a maze to promote deeper mutual exchange between Okinawa and the three prefectures in the disaster-stricken area in the Tohoku region. The three, Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima Prefectures, bore the brunt of the disaster and are still in need of reconstruction assistance, much like Okinawa that was the prefecture that experienced enormous damage because of the war.

Everyone is invited.

Everyone is invited.

Local preschool children and park staff planted the seeds November last year. The maze is expected to open on the day of the Great Northeast Japan Earthquake, March 11, in order to have as many people as possible to pay attention to the day. The project has a website in Japanese.

The maze is scheduled to be open until April 11th, although the schedule may vary depending on the sunflowers’ blooming situation of the flowers. The maze is open every day from 08:30-17:00. Admission to the maze is free.

GoldDisc

17:23 19 Mar , 2024