Fukushima
Prefecture has hosted its fair share of international visitors
over the summer, with exchange groups from Canada and New Zealand
passing through the region over the last couple of months. The
annual Fukushima Summer School, an exchange programme run by the
prefecture which invites ten Canadian teachers to experience the
lifestyle and culture of Japan, took place in late July. The programme,
which is in its fourth year, includes culture courses such as
tea ceremony and Japanese cooking, Japanese language classes and
school visits, with the highlight being a day at the Soma Noma
Oi Festival. The teachers were also given a taste of Japanese
family life, participating in homestays in Fukushima, Iwaki and
Aizu Wakamatsu, and also enjoyed camping with Japanese families
near Lake Hibara in the Ura Bandai region. In all, one hundred
volunteers from around the prefecture made the exchange possible.
September saw the inauguration of a similar programme for teachers
from New Zealand. Eleven teachers and education officals were
invited to the prefecture to partake in a week long programme
during which they, too, participated in cultural activites and
sightseeing. The teachers visited the Aizu region, enjoying the
beauty of Ura Bandai and learning about the history of the area
through visits to Tsurugajo Castle, the Buke-yashiki (Samurai
Mansion) and Iimoriyama, the site of the fall of the courageous
group of boy soldiers called the Byakkotai. The New Zealanders
also made the most of opportunities to discuss the similarities
and differences between the educational systems and teaching styles
employed in New Zealand and Japan with local elementary, junior
high school and senior high school teachers. Also on the itinerary
was a visit to Nihonmatsu where the visitors enjoyed the beautiful
Chrysanthemum Doll Festival and the lively Nihonmatsu Lantern
Festival. Aizu's Kitashiobara-machi also played host to an exchange
group of twenty three visitors from their sister town of Turangi,
New Zealand. The group, which included Intermediate and High School
students, parents, teachers and regional council members, enjoyed
four days in the beautiful Ura Bandai region. During their stay,
the group took a short hike around the Five Coloured Lakes, visited
the Labis Spa hot pools and participated in homestays with local
residents. The visit is just one of a series of events organised
by the two regions, who are pursuing their sister-city relationship
with a great deal of enthusiasm.