Her husband first proposed the idea. After retiring as a seaman two decades ago and setting up a roof-waterproofing business, Kazuo Miyasaka said he foresaw Ogamas shrinking future. So about 15 years ago, he began pursuing several possibilities, including turning the area into a golf course. None of the ideas went anywhere until he approached Takeei,. a Tokyo industrial waste company, a couple of years ago. Takeei was interested.
Miyasaka summoned the entire village he became its permanent chief three years ago after Ogamas two other men could no longer take turns as leader because of poor health and told his neighbors about the offer.
If young people came back, these villages could go on, Kenichi Taniguchi,76, said. But thats not happening. Theyre all dying out.
1. No community in Japan choose to stop existence in their living place before Ogama.
2. With the decrease of rural population in Japan, many villages and their cultures are likely to disappear.
3. Both the rural areas and urban areas in Japan havent recovered from the long recession.
4. Rural officials say they can collect few taxes because of the backward economic development.
5. Many municipalities combined to solve the financial problem and it worked.
6. According to Bunzo Mizushiri, there is no monk who cleanses himself before climbing Takatsume now.
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