• President's Blog

When we finish the Mauritius project.

I have two days left of my work in Mauritius. I started working there about three years ago, and during that time I have traveled to Mauritius seven times, staying there for a total of about six months. Today I had a farewell lunch with the people involved.
It feels like it has been both long and short, and during that time, while I was involved in the project, I experienced many different things, including big changes in Fukushima, the company, my family, and many other things, as well as moving times, laughter, pain, and sadness. I had many mixed emotions, such as thinking it was fate that I was given the opportunity to have so many experiences, wishing I had more time, and feeling grateful to God.
A project starts, there are encounters, it gets on track, and then there is a final farewell. I think it's a repetitive process, and with each experience I gain, I sometimes feel that I have grown without even realizing it. However, I believe that a project related to the recovery, reconstruction, revitalization, and future of my hometown, Futaba County, Fukushima, may have a beginning but never an end. I see it as a mission, and as a life's work in the long term. And I feel that this region has a great future and potential, depending on how we think about it and how we do it. It's something that should be aimed not only at Japan, but also at the world.

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Sharina is the secretary of our project team.

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