Radioactive Man [View all]
By Tomo Kosuga
Interview and photos by Ivan Kovac and Jeffrey Jousan
Article translated from the Japanese by Luke Baker
Today marks the second anniversary of the earthquake that devastated Japan and caused one of the most serious nuclear disasters in world history, when the Fukushima Daiichi power plant started leaking radiation. The surrounding towns were evacuated in a rush, leaving empty homes, silent streets, and uncared-for animals. In the small town of Tomioka, however, less than six miles away from the Fukushima Daiichi plant, one man refused to leave: Naoto Matsumura, a 53-year-old fifth-generation rice farmer who is surely the most stubborn man in Japan, if not the world.
I was born and raised in this town, he told us. When I die, its going to be in Tomioka. Naotos face is browned by the sun and wrinkled from smiling; his dark eyes peer out from under heavy lidsits not the face of someone youd expect to defy the government by living in an area other people arent even allowed to visit, but Naoto wears his iconoclasm lightly.

Because he is being bombarded with as much as 17 times the amount of radiation a normal person is, and because for a while he was eating meat, vegetables, and fish that were contaminated by radiation, as well, some researchers at the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency wanted to run some tests on him. When I went down and let them look me over, they told me I was the champion, he said, meaning he had the highest level of radiation exposure in Japan. But they also told me that I wouldnt get sick for 30 or 40 years. Ill most likely be dead by then anyway, so I couldnt care less.
more
http://www.vice.com/read/radioactive-man-japan