• Login
Upgrade
JStories
  • 日本語
  • 中文 (中国)
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • AI
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Robotics
    • Mobility
    • FinTech
    • Quantum
  • Earth
    • AgriTech
    • Green Innovation
    • Disaster Tech
    • SpaceTech
    • Materials
  • Life Sciences
    • BioTech
    • HealthTech
    • MedTech
    • AgeTech
  • Society
    • Media
    • EdTech
    • Diversity
    • FemTech
    • Social Impact
  • Lifestyle
    • FoodTech
    • Beauty & Fashion
    • Wellbeing
    • Arts & Music
    • Anime
  • Travel
    • Adventure Travel
    • Luxury Travel
    • Wellness & Medical Tourism
    • Culture
  • Video
  • Deals
    • Venture Capital
    • M&A
    • Events
    • Pitch
    • Growth Support
    • Legal & IP
  • Interview
  • Opinion
  • Home
  • AI
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Robotics
    • Mobility
    • FinTech
    • Quantum
  • Earth
    • AgriTech
    • Green Innovation
    • Disaster Tech
    • SpaceTech
    • Materials
  • Life Sciences
    • BioTech
    • HealthTech
    • MedTech
    • AgeTech
  • Society
    • Media
    • EdTech
    • Diversity
    • FemTech
    • Social Impact
  • Lifestyle
    • FoodTech
    • Beauty & Fashion
    • Wellbeing
    • Arts & Music
    • Anime
  • Travel
    • Adventure Travel
    • Luxury Travel
    • Wellness & Medical Tourism
    • Culture
  • Video
  • Deals
    • Venture Capital
    • M&A
    • Events
    • Pitch
    • Growth Support
    • Legal & IP
  • Interview
  • Opinion
en English ja 日本語 zh 中文 (中国)
JStories
No Result
View All Result

Refugee-bound letters of hope left in limbo

Toshi Maeda by Toshi Maeda
08/10/2022
in EdTech, News, Social Impact, Society
0
Home Society EdTech
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

J-STORIES – Earlier this year, Japanese high school students wrote 300 letters of support to Ukrainian refugee children. However, due to some bad luck, the letters remain in Japan and a Japanese NGO is seeking help to deliver them.

In June, staff from the NGO behind the project, Earth Walkers, set off to hand deliver the letters to children in a refugee accommodation center (RAC) in Poland. But the trip didn’t go according to plan.

As the NGO works on various projects worldwide supporting children in war and disaster zones, the team stopped off in Iraq, where one such project is ongoing. Unfortunately, however, several members caught Covid-19 there, and were forced to return to Japan with the letters.

A letter from a high school student in the southern city of Kitakyushu. It is written in English and Ukrainian and contains folded paper cranes as a symbol of peace.      Source: Earth Walkers

The NGO’s representative director is freelance photographer Naoya Kodama, who has launched an appeal for funds to redeliver the letters. Around ¥300,000 (US$2,275) is needed for a planned trip in September, plus ¥1,000,000 ($7,600) for medical supplies, food, and stationery to take with the letters. However, only around ¥200,000 has been donated so far.

NGO head Naoya Kodama (center) together with the student letter writers.      Source: Earth Walkers

Kodama has been involved with volunteer activities in Japan and overseas for around 20 years.

He believes the Ukrainian children, many of whom are living with anxiety and despair, won’t have received many letters from a faraway place such as Japan before.

The letters included messages of support in English and Ukrainian such as, “We hope the war will be over quickly.”

“They will be encouraged by the thought that children in this faraway island nation are worried about them,” said Kodama

Writing letters to Ukrainian children also brought the reality of the war home to the Japanese students.

“Many Japanese children see the situation in Ukraine as an event in a faraway country (they only see) on TV,” said Kodama. “But through writing the letters … the Ukrainian situation was brought home to them,” he said.

Some of the high school letter writers from Fukushima Prefecture are also raising money for Ukraine.      Source: Earth Walkers

Kodama said he hopes that the letter writers could become a “bridge” between Japan and Ukraine, and he described the NGO’s work as “sowing seeds for the future.”

“If [through writing letters] more children pray for peace, when we reach the mid-21st century and those children run society, I hope they will spread peace in the world,” he said.

Article: Toshi Maeda Editing: Katsuro Kitamatsu

Top photo: mstandret / Envato

For inquiries regarding this article, please contact jstories@pacificbridge.jp.


Click here for the Japanese version of the article.

 

Tags: CommunityCompassionRefugees
Previous Post

The Brief #23 Energy from trash, Inclusiveness from language

Next Post

Paste-on resin provides earthquake resistance

Toshi Maeda

Toshi Maeda

A multilingual journalist with over 25 years of experience in the media industry, Maeda worked as a producer and correspondent for Reuters TV in Tokyo after stints as a reporter at The Japan Times, The Associated Press in San Francisco, Newsday in New York, and The Desert Sun in Palm Springs, California. Maeda has also taught journalism at Komazawa University’s Faculty of Global Media Studies. Currently, he serves as executive editor for solutions-focused bilingual news platform J-Stories, a PBMC media outlet.

Related Posts

One typhoon, four warning systems: Japanese AI stitches the disaster picture together
Disaster Tech

One typhoon, four warning systems: Japanese AI stitches the disaster picture together

by JStories Editorial Team
07/15/2026
As Venezuela’s quake cuts off water, a Japanese recycler shows another way
Disaster Tech

As Venezuela’s quake cuts off water, a Japanese recycler shows another way

by JStories Editorial Team
07/10/2026
日本の温泉郷に眠る地熱発電、AIデータセンターの電力源として新たな期待
Earth

Geothermal Power Taps a ‘Buried Treasure’ to Revitalize a Hot Spring Region

by Yoshiko Ohira
07/08/2026
As deepfake scams spread, a Japanese institute builds detectors to catch them
Artificial Intelligence

As deepfake scams spread, a Japanese institute builds detectors to catch them

by JStories Editorial Team
07/03/2026
Sony’s neck-worn cooler targets a world running short on ways to beat the heat
Green Innovation

Sony’s neck-worn cooler targets a world running short on ways to beat the heat

by JStories Editorial Team
07/01/2026
Next Post

Paste-on resin provides earthquake resistance

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending

Greening the desert with trash

by Yui Sawada
03/23/2023
0

KYOTO (JStories) - The sight of local Niger women throwing kitchen waste out into the African desert inspired a project...

Evolutionary artificial protein slated for market debut as early as June 2026

by Yoshiko Ohira
04/17/2026
0

JStories — Severe and hard-to-heal wounds — such as those caused by burns, injuries, pressure ulcers, skin cancer surgery, and...

Ai Heart Japan

Ai Heart Japan

by Jstories
06/18/2024
0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q0fmsRv3ZjQ Company Profile Startup Name: Ai Heart Japan Co., Ltd. Stage: Early-stage (founded March 30, 2021) Location: Japan Website: https://ai-heart.jp/...

AssistMotion Inc.

AssistMotion Inc.

by Jstories
06/18/2024
0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQrw2hrDzzc Pitch by the representative director of AssistMotion Minoru Hashimoto Company Profile Startup Name: AssistMotion Inc. Stage: Early-stage / Seed...

A pocket-size AED innovation to save more lives

by Suvendrini Kakuchi
09/11/2025
0

JStories ー A Japanese startup has developed a pocket-size automated external defibrillator (AED) — about the size and weight of...

JStories

©Articles and photos published on JStories are protected by Japanese copyright law and international treaties. They cannot be reproduced without the permission of the copyright holders

Explore JStories

  • Home
  • About JStories
  • JStories Newsletter Sign-Up
  • Company
  • Team
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Partner Press Releases

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • TOP STORIES
  • AI
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Robotics
    • Mobility
    • FinTech
    • Quantum
  • Earth
    • AgriTech
    • Green Innovation
    • Disaster Tech
    • SpaceTech
    • Materials
  • Life Sciences
    • BioTech
    • HealthTech
    • MedTech
    • AgeTech
  • Society
    • Media
    • EdTech
    • Diversity
    • FemTech
    • Social Impact
  • Lifestyle
    • FoodTech
    • Beauty & Fashion
    • Wellbeing
    • Arts & Music
    • Anime
  • Travel
    • Adventure Travel
    • Luxury Travel
    • Wellness & Medical Tourism
    • Culture
  • Video
  • Deals
    • Venture Capital
    • M&A
    • Events
    • Growth Support
    • Legal & IP
  • Interview
  • Opinion

©Articles and photos published on JStories are protected by Japanese copyright law and international treaties. They cannot be reproduced without the permission of the copyright holders

Not enough quota to unlock this post
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?