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Some 120,000 people are living in shelters, uprooted by the earthquake and tsunami that left 26,000 people dead or missing along the northeastern coast. While evacuees in some areas have started to move into temporary housing, it will be months more before enough are built for everyone that lost their home. The shelter in Ichinoseki, a sprawling former elementary school, is well supplied. A locker room on the first floor has been converted into a giant pantry packed with fresh vegetables, plus staples like rice and flour. There are giant stoves to warm food and water, communal washing machines and clean, working toilets. For many residents, the main challenge is killing time. "Some people have found part-time work, but most days we just kind of hang out," says Soichiro Suzuki, 22. In his shelter performances, Kyoraku sticks to lighthearted traditional tales. He has learned to moderate the content of the volunteer shows after performing for survivors of a deadly earthquake that hit southern Kobe in 1995. At a charity event in an area with far less damage, he performs a piece about a hospital trying to cope after a major earthquake, mixing humor and tragedy as he shuffles through half a dozen characters. Some in the audience laugh as they cry. "We need to talk about the tragedy, to get it all out," he says. "If you hold in these thoughts, they will come out in your dreams."
[Associated
Press;
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