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The world watched in horror as the scene was replayed over and over: a 30-foot wall of water ripping through Japanese villages such as Minamisanriku, leaving 10,000 of its 17,000 residents missing. But few felt the terror more deeply and personally than the family of 25-year-old Canon Purdy, who arrived in Japan the day the earth turned upside down.
“My sister ... is missing,” Purdy’s sister, Megan Walsh, wrote in a desperate Twitter message to TODAY’s Ann Curry, who arrived in Japan Saturday to cover the disastrous effects of the earthquake and resulting tsunami. “Please help with any news of evacuees.”
“I will do my best,” Curry tweeted back.
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More Tales of Survival
‘She’s OK’
Formerly a teacher of English in Japan, where she was highly popular with her students, Purdy had left the country, but returned just before the quake to see her former students graduate. Like thousands of others, including two fellow American teachers who were with Purdy, she was quickly sent fleeing by the nightmare of the March 11 quake and the tsunami that followed.
On Monday, moved by Purdy’s family’s plea and armed with a photograph of the teacher, Curry made her way to the middle school in what was left of Minamisanriku, which had been turned into a makeshift evacuation center.
The good news came a few moments later: “She’s OK,” and “somewhere outside,” other survivors told Curry. Taken to another refugee center, Curry found Purdy, along with the two other American teachers. All three were safe and sound.
Disaster at a glance
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Magnitude, location
A massive 9.0 magnitude earthquake — fifth largest since 1900 — struck at 2:46 p.m. local time (12:46 a.m. ET) on March 11, centered approximately 100 miles east of Sendai city on Japan’s main island, Honshu.Tsunami
The quake generated seven separate tsunami waves, the first of which struck 26 minutes after the earthquake and towered as high as 30 meters (nearly 100 feet) in some places, according to the U.N. Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The waves swept boats, cars, buildings and tons of debris miles inland in Japan. Smaller swells struck other Pacific Rim countries and even the United States, causing serious but far less extensive damage.Casualties
Police have confirmed 12,087 deaths, with 15,552 reported missing as of Sunday.Nuclear plants
The fuel rods in three of the Tokyo Electric Power Co.'s reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant are believed to have at least partially melted, and officials say that they fear that the core of one of the reactors has been breached, resulting in more-serious radioactive contamination. Adding to the concern is the discovery of traces of plutonium in soil outside the plant and the release of radioactive water into the Pacific Ocean. Temperatures are elevated in several of the plant's spent fuel pools, suggesting that water has receded to expose the rods, releasing more radiation. Workers at the plant have reconnected electrical lines to the plant and are working to restart the primarly cooling system, Japanese authorities, meanwhile, have ordered the evacuation of a 19-mile radius around the plant. The U.S. has recommended that its citizens living within 50 miles of the plant evacuate the area or take shelter indoors.Other impacts
Approximately 161,600 people were living in shelters set up in 16 prefectures as of Sunday, according to Reuters. Approximately 167,700 households in the north remained without power, TEPCO reported Sunday. Rolling blackouts have been imposed to conserve power around Tokyo and northern Honshu. At least 200,000 households in eight prefectures were without running water as of Sunday, the Health Ministry said. Some commodities, including gas, medicine and other necessities, are scarce in parts of the country. Radiation has been detected in both food and water in numerous prefectures and in some cases has exceeded the legal limit in Japan.
Within minutes, Purdy used Curry’s phone to call her frantic family in San Francisco. “I’m totally OK,” she told her sister.
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Stories from
“It was a great relief,” Purdy told TODAY’s Matt Lauer. With no cell phone service after the tsunami and no hope of getting any “any time soon,” Purdy knew that there was no chance that she could reach her loved ones back in the United States to let them know that she had survived. “I had to tuck it away, and hope for the best,” she said. “And hope that they weren’t too worried, and try and do what I could here.”
Video: Death toll rises amid Japan disaster (on this page)A sense of responsibility
During her time in Japan, Purdy admitted, she had come to loathe the frequent tsunami warnings that would often disturb her sleep. Now, she feels differently about them.
“Everyone here is very concerned and serious about the warnings, and coming from a different culture, I kind of understood, but blew it off a little bit. But now, I will never make that mistake again.” The tragedy and destruction that she’s seen have “been more devastating than I ever could have imagined,” Purdy told Lauer.
Even so, Purdy said she is not in any real hurry to leave. Though she had planned to travel on to India, those plans are now on hold. For one thing, her passport was washed away in the flood. But more than that, she said, she feels she has a debt to the people of Minamisanriku.
“I do feel some responsibility to stay here and help as long as I can. I’m not sure if I’d be a bigger burden or not, but I have really good friends here and people who helped us the whole time.”
Video: Ann Curry helps American in Japan reunite with family (on this page)Purdy’s mother, Adrian, told Lauer that she understands Purdy’s sense of responsibility, and despite the 72 hours of desperate fear the family endured, she has no plans to pressure her daughter to come home. “I think she got my mother’s itchy feet,” Adrian said.
Another reunion
As moving as Purdy’s story is, it may not be unique. In a nation where even the most basic lines of communication have been disrupted, U.S. expatriates such as John and Jessica Musumeci, who have been living in Japan for three years with their young sons, Zach and Max, and appeared in a subsequent TODAY segment Monday, turned to social networks like Facebook to reassure frightened relatives back home.
Even so, without power or regular access to the Internet, it took the family more than 48 hours to send out a message on Facebook that they were all right. “I apologize for not getting back sooner ... but this is the first opportunity we have had to try to reach anyone. We were able to find a nice couple who rarely enough have power and Internet,” John wrote Sunday. Though he described the preceding three days as a nightmare of aftershocks and deprivation, he assured his family and friends back home that there was good news: “We are all alive and we have a good network of expatriates here in Sendai helping each other out.”
And in a tearful reunion with Jessica’s sister, Monica Cohen, played out live via satellite link with TODAY’s Natalie Morales, the family said that they had been spared the worst of the devastation, and recounted the ordeal of being unable to let anyone back home know that they were safe. “It was so hard to know that they were trying to get in touch. There really was no way to do it,” John told Morales.
“We had very limited resources,” Jessica added. “We had no Internet, no cell phone ... it’s heartbreaking to think that they thought the worst.”
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“It’s been 72 hours of hell for myself and my family,” Monica confirmed.
As terrifying as the disaster was for the adults, for 8-year-old twins Zach and Max, the events must have been earth-shattering. But the boys maintained a brave front, their father said. “They were very good through all of this.”
“The first night we had aftershocks every five minutes,” John added. “And they were big.”
Still, the family counts itself as fortunate. They are running low on food and water, they said, but they’re surviving.
Video: American family abroad in Japan: ‘We’re OK!’ (on this page)“In our immediate area, we were so lucky,” Jessica said. “We escaped the devastation that we’re literally just miles from ... to think that the people who have been so good to us here in Japan are so devastated and the supplies are so low. The people of Japan really need help.”
That was the Musumecis’ message. The family of Canon Purdy had a more personal one, this one for Ann Curry.
“Ann Curry I love you,” Megan Walsh tweeted. “Thank you for finding my sister.”
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