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Checkers, Greenery, and Libraries: West Bloomfield Receives Visitors from Japan

Sister library program brings 10 teenagers in town for tour.

 
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Teen delegates from Awaji City, Japan enjoyed a pontoon ride to Apple Island during a visit to West Bloomfield. Courtesy of WBTPL
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Teen delegates from Awaji City, Japan enjoyed a pontoon ride to Apple Island during a visit to West Bloomfield.
The West Bloomfield Historical Society takes delegates from Awaji City on a tour of Apple Island.
Many teens from Awaji City learned how to play checkers for the first time while visiting the Westacres Branch in West Bloomfield.
Teen delegates from Awaji City, Japan are greeted by West Bloomfield Library representatives including board members Arlene Bordman (in black) and Wendy Osthaus (far left) at Marshbank Park.
The Japanese Club of West Bloomfield High School helps welcome teen delegates from Awaji City, Japan.
A teenage photographer from Awaji City, Japan captured a picnic in West Bloomfield as part of a documentary report during an official visit.

Fifteen months after the West Bloomfield Township Public Library hosted a visit from the mayor of Awaji City, Japan, the library once again hosted visitors on Sunday as part of its sister library program.

Ten Japanese teenagers from the city of just over 47,000 ate a "traditional American barbecue" dinner at Marshbank Park, received a tour of Apple Island from the Greater West Bloomfield Historical Society, and met Japanese-Americans living in the area as part of a tour organized by the library.

Director Clara Bohrer said that she felt the teens may have most enjoyed simply getting together with students attending West Bloomfield High School and communicating in Japanese with an engrossed audience.

"Our partnership program began with us simply sending artifacts back and forth, but it's grown well beyond that," Bohrer said. "It was very interesting to see what happened. The Japanese Club from the high school gathered in a circle at the library and just had a good time communicating, and that's really what we wanted to see happen."

The Awaji City Higashiura Public Library was paired with the West Bloomfield Public Library in 1999 as part of the U.S. National Commission on Libraries and Informational Science’s Sister Libraries program. As part of the program, the two libraries exchange quite a bit of information and hospitality, Bohrer said, including sending letters written by children from the communities to each other and Awaji City hosting her during a visit in 2002.

Last April, the library hosted Yasuhiko Kado, the mayor of Awaji City.

Some of the Japanese teenagers, who were picked to go at random after a popular essay contest at their hometown library, were charged with documenting the experience.

Bohrer said that the library intends to put the video online in the near future for Japanese library patrons to view, similar to a recent video created by the Greater West Bloomfield Historical Society to benefit Awaji City. 

Kayo Hishitani, a spokesperson representing Awaji City who accompanied the teenagers on the tour, said that students enjoyed learning to play checkers at the Westacres Branch on Sunday afternoon. It marked an obvious difference in library culture, Hishitani explained, which the students appreciated.

"Our libraries are generally a quite place for sitting, reading, and studying. You have many young people and families at your library, but most of ours would be students at books," Hishitani said. "You have colors, games, and computers in your library, whereas ours might be more of a natural color."

One color in particular which Japanese-Americans living in the area enjoyed showing off was green — in particular, West Bloomfield's vast recreational fields at Marshbank Park, where Tomoyo Koehler of Bloomfield Hills met the teen delegates on Sunday evening.

"It's wonderful here and it's fun to show them how we live," said Koehler of the Japanese Business Society of Detroit. "At this time of year in Japan, it's very hot and sticky, so we have a cooler summer. We also have much more green land than there is in Japan and that's fun to see.

Bohrer added, "I think the teenagers really enjoyed Apple Island as well. There are trees fallen over there and I heard them remark that they'd never seen something like that in Japan — it was beautiful to them, like natural art."

Related Topics: awaji city, marshbank park, west bloomfield township, west bloomfield township library, and westacres
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