A Brief … and Happy … Update

Per The Guardian, 9:13 PM, EDT:

yamato

“A seven-year-old boy who went missing in bear-inhabited forests in northern Japan after his parents said they abandoned him as punishment, has been found alive, according to authorities.

“The boy was found alive, but we don’t have information on details of his condition,” Satoshi Saito, a fire department rescuer, told AFP. Saito said the boy identified himself as Yamato Tanooka.

News agency Kyodo said the boy was found at about 7.50am on Friday by military personnel in a building on an exercise area in the town of Shikabe in Hokkaido, Japan’s northernmost island. It is about 5 km away from where he went missing, or 7km if travelling the region’s forest paths.

A police spokesman said: “A Self-Defence Force official who was on a drill found a boy whose age appeared to be seven.

“There was no conspicuous external injury, and the boy introduced himself as Yamato Tanooka.”

Manabu Takehara, a Self-Defence Force spokesman, told AFP: “He looked in good health, but he was sent to hospital by medical helicopter.”

Yamato is now undergoing tests at the hospital in the city of Hakodate.

According to a SDF soldier who is familiar with the building but wasn’t there when they found him, the boy was “curled up” on a mattress and not visibly injured. The soldiers gave him rice balls and bread when he said he was hungry and thirsty.

The area of forest in which Yamato went missing has experienced heavy rainfall, with overnight temperatures dropping to 7 degrees C (44F).

SDF personnel interviewed by TV Asahi said there was no heating in the building, which was supposed to be locked.

Broadcaster NHK reported the boy has been taken to hospital and police were working to confirm his identity and examine the circumstances in which Yamato went missing.

The military has been searching for the boy since Wednesday. The local town of Nanae requested military support after rescuers and police officers had already scoured the area for four days, with heavy rains at times hampering the search.

“We asked the SDF to go into places which people can’t easily access, such as deep crevasses along creeks,” town spokesman Mitsuru Wakayama told AFP.

Yamato Tanooka … Lost in the Forest …

Picture this:  A 7-year-old boy is out in the forest with his mom and dad when he becomes bored and starts tossing pebbles at cars.  As a parent, what would you do?  Well, Yamato Tanooka’s parents thought it was a good idea to leave him at the edge of the forest and drive off in their car, to teach him a lesson.  According to Yamato’s father, they returned for him within five minutes, only to find him gone.  This was four days ago, and the Yamato is still missing in an area of the forest that is known to be the home of a number of  bears.  Yamato had no food or water, and was dressed in only shorts and a t-shirt, though the temperatures dropped to 7° (C), or 44° (F) on Sunday night, accompanied by heavy rainfall in the northernmost section of Hokkaido, Japan’s main island.

I recently went on another rant about what I call ‘bad parenting’, and truly did not intend to do so again anytime soon, but this is just too much.  I raised three children and one grandchild, and yes, I made mistakes along the way … plenty of them!  But to willfully put a child through the trauma of believing he has been abandoned, that perhaps his parents no longer love him, all because he was being a perfectly normal little boy?  That, my friends, is inexcusable.  Even if Yamato had not gotten lost in the forest, this would have been cruelty in my book.  A child should always be able to believe that his parents are the two people he can rely on, the one thing in an otherwise confusing world, that define constancy, stability, and love. To some extent, I understand that there are cultural differences in child-rearing.  Where many of us in the western world are known to ‘spoil’ our children, the Japanese tend to be much stricter, but even making allowances for that, I find this unconscionable.

To add insult to injury, once the parents discovered that Yamato was missing, in their call to police they lied and said that they had been ‘collecting edible plants’ in the forest when their son suddenly went missing, only to re-cant later on.  The father, Takayuki, said: “I feel very sorry for my son. I am so sorry for causing trouble for so many people.” They also delayed in reporting his disappearance, fearing legal repercussions.  Now the police are ‘looking into’ possible charges of neglect against Yamato’s parents.

Over 150 members of the local police and fire departments, along with rescue teams, have been searching for Yamato for nearly four days, have expanded the search area and called in S&R dogs and helicopters as well, but there is still, as of this writing (Tuesday, 31 May 2016, 6:20 p.m. EDT) no sign of the boy.  Certainly there remains a ray of hope, however with each passing hour it seems more likely that Yamato will not be found alive.  I shall continue to hope and will update this post if and when new information becomes available.