I'm not alone in finding Japanese museums about earthquakes and tsunamis interesting and impactful; I know my friend Catherine who travelled with me in Took last month is the same. This episode will test out whether it's just the two of us, or if more of you share this feeling - a yearning to understand more about these kinds of disasters, to get to know more about the human stories behind them, and a keen desire to share in the "hope tourism" equation of the scenarios.
In this episode, I talk about three parts of my recent trip to Japan that fit under this idea of "hope tourism" - and not "dark tourism". As well as visiting the "Kaze no Denwa", we spent many hours at two new museums in northern Japan: the Iwate Tsunami Memorial Museum in Rikuzentakata, Iwate, and the Great East Japan Earthquake and Nuclear Disaster Memorial Museum in Futaba, Fukushima. We both found these visits so impactful, and I'm still mulling over a lot of what I saw and learnt there to this day.
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303 Digital Nomad Life
302 Chiang Rai - Thailand's Far North
Book Club 19: Landlines by Raynor Winn
301 Community-Based Tourism
300 Thailand: First Post-Covid Adventure Abroad
299 Van Travel
298 Conservation Travel
297 Travels in Iraq
296 Connecting with Local People When You Travel
295 Overnight Train Travel
294 Raynor Winn: Deep Dive Into Thoughtful Travel
293 Citizen Science for Travellers
292 Ethical Animal Experiences on Your Travels
291 Things Going Wrong on Our Travels
Book Club 18: Travel as a Political Act by Rick Steves
290 Kununurra and Seven Years of Podcasting
289 Behind the Scenes of Travel Media and Public Relations
288 Is Volunteer Tourism Good or Bad?
287 Not Your Typical Cruise
286 Melbourne, Victoria, and Sports Travel
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