10A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015 Flags:µ7KLVLVPDNLQJSHDFHDWDIDPLO\OHYHO¶ Continued from Page 1A Ziak and his wife, Keiko, are organizing the efforts through WKHLU $VWRULDEDVHG QRQSUR¿W group, OBON, a humanitari- an movement that receives the ÀDJV IURP $PHULFDQ YHWHUDQV and their families, searches for WKH ÀDJV¶ RULJLQV DQG UHWXUQV them back to Japanese families at no cost. 7KHQRQSUR¿WPRYHPHQWDI- ¿OLDWHGZLWK$VWRULD9LVXDO$UWV LVWKH¿UVWRILWVNLQG “This is very unique. These items were taken, and now 70 years later, they are being sent back to Japan as a symbol of reconciliation and love,” Rex Ziak said. On Monday, OBON and members of the 41st Infantry JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian Division — National Guard units from the Northwest that Photos of 1st Lt. Paul Nichols and his family sit in a box near a Yosegaki Hinomaru that served in World War II — will Nichols obtained when serving in World War II. Nichols’ granddaughter, Christine Wheat, host a returning ceremony at the sent the flag to the Ziaks asking them to send it back to the Japanese soldier’s family. Barbey Center at the Columbia River Maritime Museum in As- toria. The ceremony will be the ¿UVW RI¿FLDO SXEOLF WUDQVIHU RI WKH ÀDJV )LYH ÀDJV ZLOO be ceremoniously passed to OBON, which will attempt to connect them with families in Japan. “This is making peace at a family level,” Ziak said. Submitted photo Leslie “Buck” Weatherill, a World War II veteran, stands with a Yosegaki Hinomaru that he sent to the Ziaks to be returned to the Japanese family. Weatherill will be one of the guests of honor at the returning ceremony Monday. ‘It’s a miracle’ Rex Ziak founded OBON — named after the Japanese season ZKHQDQFHVWRUV¶VSLULWVDUHKRQ- ored — in 2009, the same year he married. Keiko Ziak, a native of Ja- SDQ H[SHULHQFHG ¿UVWKDQG WKH MR\ RI D ÀDJ UHWXUQLQJ KRPH Her grandfather died in Burma during World War II and dis- appeared without a trace. Her family never had closure until the son of a Canadian military memorabilia collector returned KHU JUDQGIDWKHU¶V ÀDJ WR WKH family. )RU WKH -DSDQHVH DQG IRU most other cultures, an item VXFKDVDÀDJPHDQVPRUHWKDQ LWVPDWHULDOYDOXH7KHÀDJV\P- EROL]HG .HLNR =LDN¶V JUDQGID- ther coming home. It is hanging LQDIDPLO\VKULQHDWKHUXQFOH¶V house in Japan. ³,W¶V D PLUDFOH WKDW KDS- pened,” Keiko Ziak said. “I passed that story on to Rex. He researched it and we found out that so many miracles could happen.” More than 2 million Jap- anese soldiers died in World War II, including over 1 mil- lion missing in action. The staggering numbers mean there are just as many un- FODLPHGÀDJV So far, Rex and Keiko Ziak KDYHFROOHFWHGDERXWÀDJV of which 30 have been claimed by Japanese families. Connecting the American and Japanese cultures to return WKHÀDJVKDVSURYHQGLI¿FXOWIRU the Ziaks. One obstacle is the fact that Japan did away with JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian Rex Ziak holds the pieces of a Yosegaki Hinomaru that had fallen apart over time. JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian Keiko Ziak folds a Yosegaki Hinomaru. phone books about 15 years ago, making it harder to track people down. Since 2009, Rex Ziak has been busy gathering a group of scholars who can read the names and slang messages on WKH ÀDJV ,Q DGGLWLRQ KH KDV ZRUNHG ZLWK -DSDQ¶V YHUVLRQ of veteran affairs, health de- partments and religious lead- ers. With help in place, Rex and Keiko are just recently starting WRFROOHFWDQGUHWXUQÀDJV Had they not married, the Ziaks say they would not have been able to start the OBON HIIRUW.HLNRQHHGHG5H[¶VXQ- derstanding of American gov- ernment and vice versa for it all to work. “She was able to work the other side of the ocean and I on this side,” Rex Ziak said. “It was truly a combination.” IDPLO\FRQQHFWHGWRWKHÀDJWKH SK\VLFLDQ¶V \HDUROG PRWKHU said she may want to travel to -DSDQDQGUHWXUQWKHÀDJLQSHU- son. ³,W¶V D YHU\ SHDFHIXO JHV- ture,” Rex Ziak said. David Pearson, deputy direc- tor at the Columbia River Mari- time Museum, said the museum is planning to display collected ÀDJV LQ DQ H[KLELW LQ $XJXVW The exhibit is scheduled to be open for at least a year, possi- bly two. Pearson said it will be interesting to watch the exhibit ÀXFWXDWHDVPRUHÀDJVFRPHLQ and others are returned overseas to Japan. “The museum has always KDG DQ H[KLELW RQ WKH 3DFL¿F War, so it seemed like a very interesting part of the story 70 JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian years later,” Pearson said. $V PRUH ÀDJV DUH UHWXUQHG Writing covers a Yosegaki Hinomaru. One problem with identifying the owner of the Rex and Keiko see their project flags is the changes to Japanese writing that have happened over the past 70 years. The as something larger than when changes can make it difficult to read the writing. Peaceful gesture it started, something they say 2QHRIWKHÀDJVWKDWZLOOEH could foster more peace in the returned at the ceremony Mon- future. day is from a Portland physi- ³7R PH LW¶V YHU\ VSLULWXDO´ cian, whose late father grabbed Keiko Ziak said. “We believe WKH ÀDJ GXULQJ WKH ZDU ,I WKH this is the right thing to do on =LDNV FDQ ¿QG WKH -DSDQHVH both sides of the ocean.” Spring into whale-watching Oregon Parks and Recre- ation Department will host its spring Whale Watch Week Sat- XUGD\ WR 0DUFK DW GHV- ignated whale-watching sites along the coast. Trained volun- teers from the Whale Watching Spoken Here program will be stationed at the sites from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on those days to help visitors spot gray whales KHDGLQJQRUWK9LVLWRUVZLOODOVR learn about whale migration and feeding habits. A map of the watch sites is available online at whalespoken.org Local watching sites include Cape Disappointment State Park in Ilwaco, Wash., at the Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center at 244 Robert Gray Drive; Ecola Point inside Ecola State Park; and the Neahkahnie Mountain Historic Marker along U.S. Highway 101. Camping, including yurts and cabins, is available at state parks along the coast. Go to oregonstateparks.org to check availability and make a reserva- tion. OPRD reminds visitors to be aware of storms and high waves: respect closures; stay off the sand; and watch storms from an elevated location. Dock: Project was caught in a wider debate about a proposal to export coal to Asia Continued from Page 1A But the project remained caught in a wider debate about a proposal by Ambre Energy, the Australian company that seeks to export coal to Asia. The coal would be mined in the Powder River Basin of Wyo- ming and Montana, then shipped by rail to Boardman, where it would be loaded onto barges on the Columbia River bound for the Port of St. Helens. Ocean-go- ing ships there would take the coal to Asia. Commission member David Lohman said it was appropriate for the commission to consider the longterm environmental ef- fects of the project, based on a state policy that commits Oregon to prepare for climate change. “The nature of the projected commodity (coal) can be as rele- vant as the nature of the projected MREV´VDLG/RKPDQZKR¶VDODZ- yer in Medford. 9RWLQJ IRU WKH IXQGLQJ ZHUH Lohman, Alando Simpson of Port- land and Chairwoman Tammy Baney of Bend, who switched her vote from last summer, when she voted for funding the dock project. The projects that received funding on Thursday, in order: ‡ &LW\ RI (XJHQH UHTXHVWHGPDWFKHGE\ for a 24-station, 170-bicycle Bike Share site that will link to a four-station, 40-bicycle site at the University of Oregon. • Teevin Bros. Land & Tim- ber Co., $2.34 million requested, matched with $1 million from the company, to enable it to expand its site for rail-to-barge transfers in Rainier. ‡ 6DXVH %URV UH- TXHVWHGPDWFKHGZLWK from the company, to acquire a reach stacker and forklift truck to enable it to move heavier cargo from trucks and trains onto barg- es in Rainier. • Sisters Airport, $733,259 UHTXHVWHGPDWFKHGE\ from the airport, for various im- provements. Columbia County Ride 7UDQVSRUWDWLRQ UH- TXHVWHGPDWFKHGZLWK for a transit center in Rainier. Salem-Keizer Transit Dis- trict, $1 million requested, matched with $4 million from other sources, for a transit center in south Salem. 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