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When Sato first saw the colossal brown wave rushing toward Shizugawa on Friday afternoon, it looked small enough for the 20-feet-high (6-meter-high) walls along the harbor
-- hundreds of feet (meters) of thick concrete slabs -- to stop it. But as the tsunami slammed into the harbor edge, it was clear the walls, stretched over a half-mile (a kilometer), would be useless. Sato
-- watching from her hilltop home -- saw the surging water easily engulf not only the walls, but crash over the top of four-story-high buildings in the distance. Sato grabbed her 79-year-old grandmother and started running up a pathway behind her home to the tsunami refuge. But there, she saw several dozen people who had gathered already on the move. "Run!" screamed one. "The water is coming! It's getting higher!" shouted another. The wave fast approaching, Sato ran up the steps into a Shinto shrine, past a cemetery and kept going, finally coming to a halt out of breath beside a cell phone tower. The surging sea swept over the refuge below them, picking up 16 cars that had been parked neatly in a row and cramming them chaotically together into a corner of the parking lot. Below, the ocean had swallowed all of Shizugawa, rising above a four-story mini-mall and the town's hospital, two of the few buildings still standing
-- but totally gutted -- when the wave receded. "I thought I was going to die," Sato said Tuesday afternoon, as she gathered up two sweaters, two books and a pillow from her ruined house, whose missing front wall looked out over the town, where a line of army-green Japanese Self Defense Force jeeps rode through the destruction. The harbor wall is now half missing. On one road that still exists in Shizugawa, evacuation routes can still be seen painted into the tarmac. One shows a blue wave curled around a running human figure. A green arrow indicates a refuge is just a few hundred yards (meters) away
-- the same one now covered with debris beside Sato's house. Just around the corner, the road is gone, surrounded by an apocalyptic wasteland of knotted rubble that used to be Shizugawa.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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