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'Run!': After Warning Others, Heroic Emergency Workers Were Lost

A Japanese soldier stood watch earlier today (March 15, 2011) over the rubble of what was Rikuzen-Takada City in Japan.
Paula Bronstein
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Getty Images
A Japanese soldier stood watch earlier today (March 15, 2011) over the rubble of what was Rikuzen-Takada City in Japan.

There will be many, many stories of bravery as we learn more about what happened Friday in Japan when a 9.0-magnitude earthquake triggered devastating tsunamis that wiped some communities off the map, leaving thousands missing or dead.

Chie Matsumoto, a journalist in Japan who has been traveling to some of the hard-hit areas and reporting on Twitter about what she's seen (you can translate her posts into English if you use Chrome as your browser), responded to a request for reports from Japan from our friends at the with word of what people in Rikuzen-Takada City told her. A tsunami there tore through the community.

She writes that:

"People received the warning through the city speakers that are set up outside. They heard, 'A big tsunami is coming. You need to evacuate.' Shortly after, they heard, 'Run!'

"The announcement was cut off and the people never heard from the speakers, or the people who announced it, again. The few people assigned to announce it were at the disaster prevention center, and they went missing.

"They sacrificed their lives to send everyone else to a safer place. They gave priority to others' safety. The disaster prevention center is now under the mud brought on by the tsunami."

The Public Insight Network connects journalists from American Public Media and other partner newsrooms with people around the world who can help report on events. You can .

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Mark Memmott is NPR's supervising senior editor for Standards & Practices. In that role, he's a resource for NPR's journalists – helping them raise the right questions as they do their work and uphold the organization's standards.