Rishiri 2014
While on an Anthropology field course at Rebun Island, Japan in the summer of 2014, student Richard Wood took a break to explore his family history. Here's his story:
"I visited Rishiri Island in late August, 2014 to learn about my family history. I traveled with my companion, Claudia Sanchez, from our archaeological excavation on Rebun to the island of Rishiri. One hundred and sixty-six years ago, Ranald MacDonald (my great-great-great uncle) shipwrecked himself on Rishiri Island because of his curiosity for Japanese culture. He landed at a time when Japan was closed to the Western world and became the first English teacher in Japan. We were met by three kind hosts: high school English teacher Miss Mayumi Nakanishi, news reporter Mr. Miyanaga Toshiaki, and Mr. Eiji Nishiya, the retired curator of the Rishiri Island Museum. I am forever grateful for the hospitality that I received on Rishiri.
First we visited the memorial for Ranald MacDonald near the beach, where we met the heads of the Ranald MacDonald Scholarship Foundation. A plaque outlines his story and describes him as a "father of modernization."
Mr. Toshiaki wrote a wonderful article about our day on Rishiri, which was translated to me by our esteemed interpreter, Amanda Gomez. The article described my visit as a symbol of international friendship between Japan, the United States (Ranald was born in the Columbia District in 1824, before the Canada U.S. boundary was established), and Canada. I am humbled by this sentiment and appreciative of the hospitality shown to me by all of my Japanese friends. I look forward to revisiting Rishiri in the future and seeing these friends again." - Richard Wood