Takayuki Tanooka, father
of the 7-year-old Japanese boy who went missing nearly a week ago, bows
in front of media after his son was found, in Hakodate, Hokkaido Friday,
June 3, 2016. (Daisuke Suzuki/Kyodo News via AP) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY
CREDIT
TOKYO—Nearly a week after he was abandoned in the forest
by his parents, the boy did not shed a tear when he was found safe
Friday. The soldier who discovered him by chance in a military hut gave
him two rice balls, which 7-year-old Yamato Tanooka ate ravenously. He
looked a bit worn out but was “genki,” the military said, using a
Japanese word describing healthy children.
The boy’s safe return was welcomed in a nation riveted by his
disappearance and undergoing intense soul-searching about how it raises
and disciplines its children.
Yamato’s story, as pieced together from comments from the military and police, was admirable in resourcefulness and resilience.
His parents, trying to teach him a lesson for misbehaving and
throwing rocks, made him get out of the car last Saturday on the
northernmost main island of Hokkaido in a forest reputedly ridden with
bears. They couldn’t find him when they returned several minutes later.
Apparently walking for several kilometers, the boy found the empty
hut in a military drill area and entered a door that had been left open.
The longhouse-style hut had no heat or power and no food, but Yamato
huddled between mattresses on the floor and drank water from the
solitary faucet outside the hut for several days, local media reported.
A massive manhunt, including 180 people and search dogs, had found no
trace of him. The soldier who found him had not been part of the
frenzied search effort, but soon the boy identified himself as Yamato
Tanooka (Tah-noh-oh-kah).
Rescuers
celebrate after a news that a missing boy was found, in Nanae town, on
Hokkaido, the northernmost of Japan’s four main islands Friday, June 3,
2016. (Daisuke Suzuki/Kyodo News via AP)
Appearing outside the hospital where the boy was flown in by
helicopter, his father apologized, bowing deeply, thanked everyone for
the rescue and vowed to do a better job as his dad.
“We have raised him with love all along,” said the father, Takayuki
Tanooka, fighting tears. “I really didn’t think it would come to that.
We went too far.”
Military officials expressed admiration for the boy’s perseverance,
as the building where he was found was far from where he had disappeared
and involved a rigorous uphill climb.
The boy was dehydrated and had minor scratches on his arms and feet,
but no serious health risks were found, a doctor who examined him said
on nationally televised news.
Although going without water is dangerous even for a few days, people
can survive longer without food, such as people who have fasted or gone
on hunger strikes for a few weeks. While experts say a water-only diet
for so long must have been painful, they boy apparently stayed at the
hut for much of the time. More details on his experience were not
immediately available.
Asked what he had told his son after he was found, the father said, “I told him I was so sorry for causing him such pain.”
The nation welcomed the boy’s safe return. Old photos of Yamato,
wearing a cowboy hat here, holding up two fingers in a peace sign there,
his bangs falling over a proud smile, were flashed across again and
again on TV.
The
media and members of the Self-Defence Forces stand near the building
where the 7-year-old Japanese boy who went missing nearly a week ago,
was found, in a military drill area in Shikabe, on the northernmost main
island of Hokkaido Friday, June 3, 2016. (Takaki Yajima/Kyodo News via
AP)
Daijiro Hashimoto, a former governor appearing on a talk show on TV
Asahi, wondered how the boy had endured the loneliness, especially at
night, and suggested that perhaps he had imagined he was on some
adventure and was hiding in a secret camp.
“He had to keep a very positive attitude,” Hashimoto said, reflecting
widespread sentiment here. “He is fantastic. He didn’t know how long it
might take, and when he would ever be saved.”
The boy’s disappearance and the debate set off by the parents’
decision resonated in an aging nation with a dearth of children, where
child-raising is expensive and often requires financial sacrifice.
Japanese culture also is not seen as promoting individual rights of
children, but rather to view children almost as family property.
Abandonment and child abuse are far more common in Japan than the
stereotype of the doting parent and stay-at-home mom would suggest.
Yamato’s parents are not officially under any police investigation for their actions.
Mitsuko Tateishi, an educator who has written a book urging mothers
to take it easy, says many parents are isolated in Japan, get
competitive in wanting their children to perform, and need advice
especially from more experienced parents.
“The punishment this parent chose is unthinkable. They have no idea
how to raise a child. They did not try to explain what was right and
wrong,” she said in a telephone interview. “A child is not a dog or a
cat. You have to treat the child like a human individual.”
Tateishi said Japan remains behind the West in protecting children,
and she doubts any concrete action would be taken against these parents.
Still, a child welfare expert said abandonment of a child should be
treated seriously. Tamae Arai, who heads a Tokyo ward’s family support
operations, said though she does not know the specifics of this case an
investigation would be likely in a similar case to ensure a child is
protected.
“Beating and kicking are not the only forms of child abuse. There is
also neglect. Of course, we are all thrilled he was found, but it is
important to note that there could be a serious problem here,” she said.

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