Love of Osatsu and Family
“When I was in the first grade of senior high school,” begins Shizuka, 22, who is now a student at Kogakkan University, “the actor Tomio Umezawa often talked about advertising the ama profession through high-school ama, but at that time I had no thoughts about becoming an ama diver at all. It was in the third grade of senior high school, in the winter when my admission to university was finalized, that I made the decision to become an ama diver.” Shizuka is a typical young woman. She likes going to karaoke with friends and is a fan of the singer Kumi Koda and the model Rola.
“Osatsu has a small population,” she goes on, “so everyone is together in a single class from kindergarten to senior high school. But after graduation from senior high school, everyone leaves and goes to places like Nagoya or Osaka to attend university or find a job. I was very sad when I thought about that and felt I had to do something. So I got the idea of becoming an ama diver.”
At present Shizuka leads a very busy life, studying at university, helping out at the guesthouse, diving to harvest shellfish, and also taking part in PR activities as the 57th Miss Ise-Shima. It seems like a lot for a young woman to take on, but Shizuka replies: “Osatsu women all work really hard. They go out fishing, do the housework, engage in farming, run a guesthouse. I was brought up in that kind of environment, so I don’t think of my life as hard at all. On the contrary, it’s great fun and very fulfilling!”
Shizuka grew up watching her grandmother and mother working hours on end without rest as ama divers, wives, and mothers, so “hard life,” it seems, is just not part of her vocabulary.
“Next year it will be time for me to look for a job,” she says. “If possible, I would like to work in PR for products or services with value. But I don’t want to leave Mie Prefecture. I mean, the nature here is wonderful. There’s lots of delicious seafood and meat, and the people are big-hearted. There’s no place like it. And more than anything else, I love my family and want to stay near them.”
If the number of young people like Shizuka, full of love for hometown and family, increases, then the regions of Japan, and the nation as a whole, can look forward to a bright future.
A campaign is growing to get the traditional ama culture registered as a world intangible cultural heritage. One gets the impression that registration is not far off.