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Seiei Toyama

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Masahide Toyama Statue

Seiei Toyama is Japanese recipient of 2003 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Peace and International Understanding the board of trustees recognizes his twenty-year crusade to green the deserts of China in a spirit of solidarity and peace.[1][2]

He was born in Shinkura, Mizuho Village, Minamitsuru County, Yamanashi Prefecture (later known as Shinkura, Shimoyoshida Town, now Shinkura, Fujiyoshida City )[3]  .[4] He graduated from the former Yamanashi Prefectural Hikawa Junior High School (now Yamanashi Prefectural Hikawa High School ), the former Second High School, and the Faculty of Agriculture, Kyoto Imperial University  . He succeeded in greening 20,000 hectares of desert in China, and is the only person, other than Mao Zedong, to have a bronze statue erected in China during his lifetime in recognition of his achievements .[5]

history

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He was born as the third of six children to a family that lived in the Taisho-ji temple of the Jodo Shinshu Hongan-ji sect of Buddhism .[3] He studied hard from middle school onwards and was accepted into the Faculty of Agriculture at Kyoto Imperial University . After graduating, he worked as an assistant professor at the university. In 1934, at the age of 28, he received an offer from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to study land and agriculture in mainland China. During his studies, the Gobi Desert had eroded farmland, leading to the impoverishment of more than 20 million people who had starved to death. Among the people waiting in a queue of several dozen kilometers for a bowl of rice porridge at a soup kitchen, he refused a request from a local father of several children to buy his 15-year-old daughter for 30 yen (at the time). Two years later, he was ordered to return home after the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War .[5]

In 1962, he received his doctorate in agriculture from Kyoto University .[6] His thesis title was "Study on the Special Environment of Sand Dune Areas and Adapted Crops"  . He retired in 1971. The following year, in 1972, when diplomatic relations between Japan and China were normalized, he left his family in Japan and visited China alone, spending all his money. The Chinese government was unable to stop desertification, and the site of a village in the 1930s had become a ghost town. In the desert, which is as large as Shikoku and is known as the "land of death" that has produced more than 20 million refugees, he walked dozens of kilometers every day in temperatures exceeding 40 degrees during the day, digging the sand by hand and discovering a water source. After discovering the water source a few months later, he raised donations in Japan and, based on the example of the Tottori Sand Dunes, collected about 70 million kudzu seeds, which can grow in the desert, over the course of eight years. Then, at the age of 80, he visited China with his cooperating staff and planted 3,000 kudzu seeds despite being obstructed by local residents, but even though he begged them on his knees, they were eaten overnight by the local grazing goats and their owners. So they planted poplar trees instead. However, they died due to lack of moisture, so they brought over from Japan a highly water-retaining polymer from Japanese diapers and used it, which proved successful. However, just when they had planted one million trees, the Yellow River flooded and they were washed away. The residents, who had been treating them as spies, were moved, and with the cooperation of the locals, one million trees were quickly planted. One year after the flood, the dead land had become a 20,000-hectare green forest, and the area was successfully converted into farmland. Vegetables were able to be grown, and the residents who had left returned. In this way, Toyama revived what was once a "dead land"  . His efforts were featured in the NHK documentary " Project X: The Challengers ."

In 1991, he founded the NPO Japan Desert Greening Association, and since then has worked with volunteers to carry out greening activities, such as planting poplar trees, in the Kubuqi Desert ( Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, China ) .[5]

In 1996, the Chinese government erected a bronze statue of him while he was still alive. He is the only person other than Mao Zedong to have one built .[5]

In August 2003, he was awarded the Ramon Magsaysay Award (in the category of Peace and International Understanding), known as the Asian Nobel Prize, for his achievements .[7]

He passed away in February 2004 in Tottori City due to pneumonia (aged 97)  .[8]

In November 2005, the Toyama Masaaki Memorial Room was opened at Kodomo no Kuni in the Tottori Sand Dunes .[9]

His eldest son, Masao Toyama, carried on his father's wishes by starting a reforestation project in Zambia in 1989 (Heisei 1) .[10]

References

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  1. ^ "Mr. Seiei Toyama". fujiyoshida city official website. Retrieved 2024-12-16.
  2. ^ "Seiei Toyama | Get Textbooks | New Textbooks | Used Textbooks | College Textbooks - GetTextbooks.co.in".
  3. ^ a b "Biography of Toyama Seiei". Retrieved 2024-12-16.
  4. ^ "遠山正瑛 - NPO法人 国際留学生協会/向学新聞". www.ifsa.jp. Retrieved 2024-12-16.
  5. ^ a b c d "スパイ疑惑をかけられながらも...中国"死の土地"で2000万人の飢えを救った日本人(テレ東プラス) - Yahoo!ニュース". archive.is. 2019-05-20. Retrieved 2024-12-16.
  6. ^ Skelton, J.; Rodgers, C.; Ellis, L.; Lyles, A. (2014-05-15). "Rubrics and Evaluations". I-manager's Journal on School Educational Technology. 9 (4): 7–13. doi:10.26634/jsch.9.4.2708. ISSN 0973-2217.
  7. ^ "遠山正瑛/中村哲 マグサイサイ賞受賞 | 時事用語事典 | 情報・知識&オピニオン imidas - イミダス". 情報・知識&オピニオン imidas. Retrieved 2024-12-16.
  8. ^ "Desert greening researcher Masaaki Toyama passes away at age 97". 2004-06-21. Archived from the original on 21 June 2004. Retrieved 2024-12-16.
  9. ^ "日本沙漠緑化実践協会 / 沙漠を緑に!". www.sabakuryokka.org. Retrieved 2024-12-16.
  10. ^ 日本人名大辞典+Plus, デジタル版. "遠山柾雄(とおやま まさお)とは? 意味や使い方". コトバンク (in Japanese). Retrieved 2024-12-16.