страничка для ковчега на фэйсбуке

Mar 23, 2011 16:28

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Поможем пострадавшим!
Is sleeping on blankets on floors in community centers comfortable? Of course not. Here's a better alternative! My name is Elena. I am an English teacher in Japan. Luckily, I am able to speak very fluent Japanese, English as well as my native language, Russian. I am trying to use my abilities to help the people in the Fukashima region left homeless. My dad is a retired maritime construction engineer in Vladivostok, Russia who saw Japan's earthquake/tsunami victims and his heart broke. The destruction is bad enough, but one's heart goes out to those who are now simply existing in cramped community centers with nothing to sleep on but a hard floor with a thin blanket. Is this all that could be done? he questioned. The maritime engineer in him knows better. He is aware of a Russian military hospital ship that is in port close to where he lives. It is idle at the moment but could provide much better one-stop accommodation. The boat can manage a 100 sick people (remember those old people stuck in school gymnasiums without medical care) and evacuate 450 people. There are private cabins with mattresses, toilets, medical facilities, even a swimming pool. It is only two-day sail from Japan. For more information please google hospital ship Irtysh. I am now trying to mobilize support in both Russia and Japan, as well as appealing to anyone who cares, to help convince these governments to realize that there is an option and make it happen. Government bureaucracy can sometimes be more overpowering than a tsunami in crushing initiative and innovation. But ordinary people so far this year have used facebook as a simple tool to do the unimaginable in the most unlikely places. My point is your clicking to join my page can make a difference. Please help me turn a ship that has been about war into a floating testament to peace, humanity and hope. Join now! You membership can, and will, make a difference.
Elena and friends
PS текст написал товарищ по работе.

кто-со-мной?, Япония, ковчег для пострадавших, землетрясение 2011

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