Hiroshima in the Morning
Table of Contents
Praise
Epigraph
Title Page
Dedication
PROLOGUE
PART I - IF HIROSHIMA
JUNE 19, 2001
TOKYO
AUNT MOLLY’S VISION
HIROSHIMA
RUDE AWAKENING
JUNE 25, 2001
JUNE 29, 2001
PEACE MUSEUM
JUNE 30, 2001
FAITH
JULY 1, 2001
HELPLESS
FIRST TESTIMONY
SELFISH
THREE WOMEN
MAGIC
JULY 12, 2001
PART II - IN THE MORNING
ON THE HILL
MAIDENS
SISTERS
JULY 22, 2001
YOUR FAMILY NEEDS YOU
JULY 25, 2001
LILY
TOO LATE
AUGUST 1, 2001
PEACE NIGHT
VACATION
AUGUST 14, 2001
THE COLONEL
HOME
PART III - AFTER THE BOMB
SEPTEMBER 12, 2001
SEPTEMBER 13, 2001
SEPTEMBER 13, 2001
SEPTEMBER 13, 2001
SEPTEMBER 16, 2001
SEPTEMBER 20, 2001
PART IV - LIKE A DREAM
RUNNING
OCTOBER 3, 2001
DO YOU THINK ABOUT WAR?
OCTOBER 9, 2001
GO-GO BOOTS
OCTOBER 10, 2001
WITHOUT LANGUAGE
RABBITS
JANE IS WAITING
UNDERGROUND
TRIP TO THE SUBURBS
OCTOBER 29, 2001
NOVEMBER 12, 2001
A LACK OF WORDS
NOVEMBER 13, 2001
NOVEMBER 14, 2001
PART V - ONE MUST ASK WHOSE?
THE FAMILY ARRIVES
EXPLOSION
GAGAKU
NIGHTINGALE FLOORS
RUNNING
SACRIFICES
BACK STAGE AT THE NOH THEATER
CONSULTING WITH DOCTORS
NAMES ON A LEAF
PROMISES
BREATHING
ASK
LILY
TSUWANO IN THE SNOW
MOSHI MOSHI
COURT MUSIC
THE MAP
WRITING
UNDERGROUND
KANJI
OF THE DAY JUST BEGINNING
Acknowledgements
Copyright Page
MORE PRAISE FOR HIROSHIMA IN THE MORNING
“If remembering lies at the heart of all memoir, the best memoir goes far deeper, asking questions about the propulsive nature of time, the consequences of forgetting, and the treacherous liberations of solitude. Hiroshima in the Morning is a memoir of the most sophisticated kind, a lyric, a quest, a universal poem.”
—Beth Kephart, author of A Slant of Sun,
a National Book Award finalist
“Rahna Reiko Rizzuto’s new book is intimate and global, lyrical and clear-eyed, a compelling personal narrative, and an important social document. Here past and present, Hiroshima and 9/11, interweave to tell a story of unendurable loss and tragedy but also of tenacity, survival, and rebirth.”
—Lauren Kessler, author of Stubborn Twig: Three
Generations in the Life of a Japanese American Family
PRAISE FOR RAHNA REIKO RIZZUTO’S WHY SHE LEFT US
“A ferocious first novel. . . . Bold and disciplined. Rizzuto’s talent for creating vivid scenes, for getting inside strong emotions, for writing with great power, is unmistakable.”
—Newsday
“Rizzuto’s characters are wonderfully well drawn—jagged, honest, and unpredictable.”
—Washington Post Book World
“An enigmatic and engaging novel. . . . Rizzuto wisely leaves the mystery that drives the story intact, even as she explores it from every possible angle.”
—Los Angeles Times Book Review
For if Hiroshima in the morning, after the bomb has fallen, is like a dream, one must ask whose dream it is.
—Peter Schwenger
For my children Forever and for everything
PROLOGUE
LEAVING
I CAN TELL YOU THE STORY but it won’t be true.
It won’t be the facts as they happened exactly, each day, each footstep, each breath. Time elides, events shift; sometimes we shift them on purpose and forget that we did. Memory is just how we choose to remember.
We choose.
IT BEGINS IN OUR HOUSE, on the top floors of a nineteenth century brownstone. I’m sitting at our long dining room table across from my husband Brian, my two, brightly-pajamaed sons asleep—finally—after slipping downstairs for water, and then just one more kiss between the banisters. The year is 2001, the place New York City, and in the quiet of the last, warming days of May, I am making a list.
I am a list maker, a super-organizer who measures her success in life by how many of the items she’s checked off. This is who I’ve always been, and it’s never occurred to me to question it. It occurs to me only that I have a goodbye party to throw for myself, which will involve a twenty-five-pound pork butt, Hawaiian rock salt, and ten yards of purple plumeria-patterned fabric that I’ve ordered on the internet but has yet to arrive. If I think about plates, about feeding fifty of my dearest friends who will come to wish me well, I will not have to think of this trip of mine—my first trip away, my first trip alone, my six-month long “trip” to the other side of the world.
Brian watches me busy myself. And then the question: “Why are you going to Japan?”
I lift my eyes—the answer so obvious that it hardly seems possible his question is real. It is, in fact, impossible to consider his question, to glimpse just the broad shoulders of his doubt before it escapes into the shadows, to hear the bass notes of sadness in his voice. Impossible because these things would trap me.
Even looking around my home would hold me here.
I will come to believe, months from now, that life is a narrative. That who we are, what roles we choose—that these are deliberate characters we create to explain what we did and find a way to face tomorrow. That memory is not history. That we rewrite ourselves with every heartbeat. At this moment, though, my life is still a given. It does not—despite the contradiction of reality—change. My life is what surrounds me; I subsist on it so entirely that I can’t begin to see it. The air I breathe is the air that still shimmers in the spot, just above me, where my enormous belly and I once stood on a scaffold, in a bikini top and a pair of baggy sweat-pants, spackling the ceiling three weeks before my oldest son was born. I still draw sustenance from the echoes over the kitchen floor where my children love to dance during dinner. Echoes that shrink, cool, fade but do not, even over lifetimes, completely disappear. I am more than anchored to my world; I am tied tight like Gulliver by the tangle of past poses and years—mine, Brian’s, my children’s—toe here, breast, belly button, wedding ring. In the room, in the trophies from every trip Brian and I have taken since we were teenagers, there are so many flags that say we were there, and there, and there. There are decades of a life that’s far more tangible than I am. And it’s not just the there, the good life, that I am dangerously, paradoxically blind to—it’s the lack of my own identity, the utter, unqualified we.
Instead, I take inventory: I have stocked the freezer with food, put all the “to do” papers together for my sons’ upcoming school year; I have rearranged our babysitter’s schedule so Brian will be able to get to work on time and won’t have to race home in the evening. He was there when I did these things. W
hen I found the ad for the fellowship, he was the one who urged me to apply. I had rejected the idea: it was too unplanned for, this grant that would not be awarded for a year and then could be postponed for another. It was not absolutely essential. Six months to live in Japan, to do whatever I wanted, when I only needed three weeks, a month at most to do some research for my book. And yet. How else would I get to Hiroshima? The thought kept sneaking back, tangling my feet. There was an urgency growing—inexorable and obscure—even though I had no visual, of Japan, of absence, of myself, to guide my journey. I was the one who raised the idea in the first place, and though I could not picture myself leaving, still, I filled out the paperwork.
And then I won.
Brian had plenty of help with the children. And, he himself pointed this out, he had always promised to be their primary caretaker, so he owed me a chunk of time. Once the decision was made—the lying on the couch together, the press of flank to flank and Brian’s assurances, not even whispered, that everything would be fine, he could handle it, they would come visit, maybe even for half the time—it became oddly easy to forget the fact that I’d never lived on my own, for six days let alone six months. That I had never lived in a foreign country, spoken another language; I’d never set off without a plan tucked carefully in my pocket and an extra copy posted on the fridge. Something about this opportunity had exploded all my patterns of behavior: I, the domestic center—the mother of babies, really, of small boys ages three and five—came to see no portent in leaving my family with four telephone numbers in my backpack and not many more Japanese words in my head. But in my own rush to manage, and his inclination to ignore what’s in front of him and hope for the best—“how” had been the only question until this moment.
“Because I got the grant,” I replied.
IN BROOKLYN, IN 2001, I was making a list. I knew I was leaving, but if I had known how thoroughly my life would shatter over the next six months, into gains just as astonishing as the losses; if I knew I was saying goodbye to the person I was that night, that decade, that lifetime; if I understood I was about to become someone new, too new, someone I was proud of, who I loved, but who was too different to fit here, in this particular, invisible narrative that I was sitting in but couldn’t feel, would I still have gotten on the airplane?
This is the question people will ask me. The question that curls, now, in the dark of the night.
How do any of us decide to leave the people we love?
PART I
IF HIROSHIMA
The things that you forget to prepare yourself for:
Locking the door.
Walking away from the house.
—First diary entry, June 19, 2001
JUNE 19, 2001
THESE ARE THE THINGS I packed:
—Twelve blank notebooks (paper is more expensive in Japan, or so I am told);
—Three hundred tablets of Motrin IB and a bottle of 240 of the world’s heaviest multivitamins;
—Forty-eight AA batteries in case my tape recorder dies mid-interview once a week, every week, for the six months I’ll be away from home;
—Twenty-four copies of my first novel to give as omiyage;
—Two never-opened textbooks on how to read kanji.
THESE ARE THE THINGS I KNOW:
Hotel rooms in Tokyo are so small you can’t turn over in your bed without knocking your shampoo into the sink.
Identically suited salary men surge forth like lemmings every day for a fifty minute lunch.
Before I land, I should at least know how many islands Japan has, and what they are called.
Five hours down. Seven hours and six months to go.
TOKYO
I AM WALKING IN SHINJUKU STATION. Me and Ellen and the one million, nine hundred and ninety-nine thousand, nine-hundred and ninety-eight other people who come through this place every day. And as much as I loathe the thought of being a wide-eyed tourist, this is not, and never could be, a train station.
It is Oz.
It is miles of shopping. Kiosks, salons, restaurants, boutiques, pharmacies, grocery stores, bookstores—stores within stores, on top of stores, kitty-corner to other stores. I tick them off, each as marvelous as the one that will come next: I can get a cell phone here; a toy; envelopes for weddings, funerals, and birthdays; perfume; a happi coat; wine from France. Anne Klein is underground, right next to agnès b. And for those passengers returning from Kyoto who haven’t yet bought a gift for everyone they know, there are sweet, folded yatsuhashi in sets from six to forty-eight. They sell art here—actual paintings in the subway. But of course, this is not the “subway.” This is wide, bright, incredibly clean. There are no homeless people here, and all the smells are good.
These are my thoughts as Ellen strolls beside me. It’s my second day, a day of rain in Tokyo, and I’ve been brought here because, here, I can gawk all day and never get wet. It’s not that the city is strange, not exactly, not in the way of being unimaginable or never before seen, but still, I seem to be having a hard time filtering. In my rush to understand, to label and characterize—in my excitement—I’ve lost even the basics of perspective because, in the same way I might experience the sun moving across the sky, Tokyo has become a parade. I’ve walked from the train station itself to Takashimaya, and then through a second department store, over a covered bridge piped with American pop tunes, to a Kinokuniya bookstore with an excellent collection of English-language fiction, all without going outside. Now, back in the general perimeter of the train station, I’m still ticking off the floats: this one is the basement of yet another department store, where Ellen can buy some beef for her stroganoff dinner.
Stroganoff as a gift from the hostess, perhaps. A reminder, for me, of home. It was one of the few dishes my mother used to make, the kind with cream of celery soup in a can, that went along with the green beans and fried onions in a can, the boxed Jell-O, the short list of food from the 1950’s. My memories maroon me: the green beans especially, and the three-tiered gelatin mold that was featured at every Thanksgiving with my mother’s side of the family, the one with the cream cheese layer that no one ever ate. There are few occasions to think of such things anymore. I’m still unused to the silence that ushers in the subject of my mother, or the irony that she resides more and more in my memory even though she is still alive.
Every time Ellen asks about my parents, I add a few more trifles to my standard response. By now, I am used to evasion, perhaps even good at it. Since my mother’s illness became apparent, I haven’t had the occasion to spend so much time with someone who knows her, a friend who could pick me out instantly at the customs gate in the airport—me, the differently shaded replica of my mother—and who would hug this stranger to her as a long-lost child. Ellen will give up five full days of her life for me, to take me every single place I need to go, want to see, or might like to experience if only I knew it existed. She merely smiles when, on my first day in her small suburban neighborhood, we must stop three times on the way to the train station to take pictures of narrow two-block-long side streets because there are signs outside the shops with kanji on them; we snap picture after picture of one or the other of us standing in front of shrines smaller than a bedroom, which must be captured on film to send back to New York for my children since they have never seen these curving, organic roof lines tucked under like a turtle shell, tipped up like the wings of a bird. Roofs with snakes’ scales, edged in armor, fish dancing on their bones, cranes sleeping on the mossy, wooden ribs that fan out above them. These animals whirl in my head—who knows why one is here and not the other?—and if I don’t capture them now, there may never be another chance. Ellen indulges me without once mentioning how ridiculously small my vision is. It’s her pleasure to care for the poor foreign child who doesn’t speak Japanese . . . But I am not a child. I’m a thirty-seven-year-old mother who should be equipped; who should have left my home once in a while; who should not still need a mother—and even though I say I don’t, and Elle
n says of course I don’t, it’s still more than nice to put off that moment when I must determine which “. . . mutter mutter gozaimasu” means this is where I’m supposed to get off the train. If it was a bit of a shock that, after three months of language study, I was finding it impossible to guess where individual words begin and end in both written and spoken Japanese, it was at least a perfectly acceptable reason to be coddled . . . until Ellen assured me that she doesn’t speak Japanese either.
In Tokyo, I am beginning to realize, you don’t need to speak a word of Japanese.
The young woman at the J-phone shop wearing blue contact lenses speaks English. The hawkers on the streets in front of the nightclubs do, too—and many of them are do-rag adorned, Fubu-wearing African American men whose very existence suggests that genuine hip-hop style will rub off on all who enter there. Every building and storefront in Roppongi has English on it: WELCOME, BIG SALE, LUNCH SPECIAL, HEAD STORE, STARBUCKS. Every restaurant has an English menu you don’t even have to ask for. Of course, Ellen can buy beef in a department store basement. She can spend fifty dollars on one hundred grams of meticulously marbled meat, she can spend twelve dollars on a peach. Beneath the layers of the latest New York and Paris fashions, she can peruse a kaleidoscope of sustenance, from jellyfish to pancake mix, all without a word of Japanese.
It isn’t the gift of borrowed translation, then, that I’m relaxing into. It’s the possibility that life here might be possible. And if I am not aware of it yet, if to be aware of it would mean admitting my fear—which is precisely what all my intense and dogged efforts to ignore the fact that I was going to Japan were designed to obscure—still, I can feel a loosening. As I watch Ellen select her groceries with no task more unusual than placing her bread on a plastic tray in the bakery section; as Ellen smiles at the cashier and takes the bags she needs to pack up her own items after she pays, all without actually speaking to the girl behind the conveyor belt who seems to be effusively thanking us for visiting the store, I can allow myself to acknowledge my journey. I am here, in Japan, and it is an odd, crazy place; it is halfway around the world, the farthest point on the globe from my real life, but there’s no reason to be nervous. I don’t have to learn anything to get along here, about them or about myself. I don’t have to change or find myself lacking—Japan has accommodated me, and long before my arrival.