Originally posted by Buddhist Channe.
“We
want to think together about how to create a prefecture that does not
depend on nuclear power,” said Buddhist monk Tetsuen Nakajima.
l FUKUI, Japan
-- Religious leaders from Buddhism, Christianity and other faiths are
calling on a higher authority as they join the campaign against the
restart of two idled reactors at the Oi nuclear power plant, operated by
Kansai Electric Power Co.
Buddhist monk Tetsuen Nakajima submitting the petition to Mikio Iwanaga, a Fukui prefectural government official
They
submitted a petition to Fukui Governor Issei Nishikawa asking him not
to agree to the restart, which the Noda administration is pushing for
before midsummer.
On May 30, about 100 members from the Interfaith
Forum for Review of National Nuclear Policy gathered in the prefectural
government office in Fukui.
“We want to think together about how
to create a prefecture that does not depend on nuclear power,” said
Buddhist monk Tetsuen Nakajima, who is serving as the chief priest of
Myotsuji temple in Obama, Fukui Prefecture.
Mikio Iwanaga, a Fukui
prefectural government official who accepted the petition, said, “We
want to ask the central government to ensure safety at nuclear power
plants.”
In the petition, the leaders
criticized government leaders for only thinking about jobs, the need for
electricity and safety from a technological aspect as they seek to
restart the reactors.
They also demanded that the Fukui
prefectural government share some of the hardships resulting from the
accident at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant and awaken to the
“stupidity” of the operation of nuclear reactors, which is conducted
even knowing that residents and workers will be exposed to radiation.
One
of the 100 religious leaders was Tokuun Tanaka, 37, a priest at Dokeiji
temple in Minami-Soma, Fukushima Prefecture, who evacuated to Sakai in
Fukui Prefecture after the accident at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power
plant in March 2011.
Tanaka evacuated to Fukui Prefecture along
with his wife and four young children as he had previously received his
ascetic training in Eiheiji temple in Eiheiji, also in Fukui Prefecture.
Since
coming to Fukui Prefecture, he has often returned to Fukushima
Prefecture where many of his Dokeiji temple’s parishioners are still
residing. He has talked with them and asked what difficulties they are
facing.
“Some towns in Fukushima Prefecture may have become rich
thanks to the nuclear power plants there. But many people there are now
regretting that. They are lamenting that an irrevocable situation has
taken place,” Tanaka said.
When he evacuated to Fukui Prefecture,
he had concerns as the prefecture is home to the largest number of
nuclear reactors in Japan.
“In Fukushima Prefecture, we were
pretending to believe the safety myth (of nuclear power plants). We were
lulled to sleep. But we were awakened forcibly. Fukui (Prefecture) is
still sleeping. It should take a step forward before the suffering like
the one in Fukushima occurs,” Tanaka said.
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