In north-eastern Japan, refugees are gathered in gymnasiums that have been converted into shelters for those displaced by the earthquake.
Some shelters have enough books, paper and pencils so that displaced kids can study. Many shelters do not. One 14 year-old at a shelter in Fukushimaās Iwaki City tells Sankei News that his house was washed away and the current conditions are not suitable for doing school work.
Some areas donāt have electricity, still or running water. Some shelters, however, do.
āMy older brotherās friend got out his Nintendo Wii and brought it here,ā he added. āSince we donāt have school supplies, thereās nothing to do all day and it gets boring.ā
The desire to do schoolwork seems to be a desire to return to normal ā or even, get oneās mind off of what happened. These kids are lucky to have a Wii, though. Quake refugee kids at another shelter recently told The Mainichi News that they really wanted video games.
https://lastchance.cc/tohoku-quake-refuge-kids-want-video-games-5785241%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
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