Youtube channel called “THREE FLAGS- Kibou no Noroshi (Signal of Hope)”
Videos are 10 to 30 minutes, focusing on one topic
Cover serious social issues, specifically focusing on issues of “social care”
Caring for children in society whose circumstances prevent their own parents from raising them
Children live in infant care until they are 2 years old, and then in orphanages/foster care from
2 to 18 years old
Tone of the show is always positive
Careful about how they write their scripts so as not to hurt or criti
The members of THREE FLAGS have experienced living under social care
Members:
Light-san (Nishizaka Raito, 34): filmmaker, picture book writer
Bro-san (Brohan Satoshi, 28): model, TV personality
Mako-san (Masako Yamamoto, 27): certified childcare worker, lecturer, organizer of ACHA project
Provides furisode kimono to young people growing up in foster care
Visited Clover House (aftercare program for those who have graduated from orphanages) at the end of May
Shed light on the kinds of activities offered in these programs
There are 605 orphanages in Japan, but most people do not have contact with them often
Number of consultations about abuse increased 13.7 times in 2018 from 2001
65.5 percent of children living in orphanages have been abused by their parents
THREE FLAGS talks about social care from the perspective of those involved in it
Discuss what happens to the children after graduating from the orphanages
Mako talks about her loneliness after graduating, and how she slept on benches outside of the home
Bro discusses financial difficulties after graduating
Discuss how abuse has increased due to the Covid pandemic
Talk about “abuse as an extension of discipline”
Focus on the boundaries between discipline and corporal punishment
Talk about more hidden issues such as poverty and cycles of abuse
Leads people to think about Japan’s social structure in relation to social care
Convention on the Rights of the Child
Adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 1989
States that children have the right to live, the right to grow up, the right to be protected, and the right to participate
Attempt to encourage those working in childcare facilities
Mako states that she is alive due to their love and compassion
Light praises the adults that helped build “Pep Kids Koriyama”
Large indoor play facility built in Koriyama after the Great East Japan Earthquake
Helped target the issue of stress and obesity after the city’s children could not go outside due to fear of radiation
THREE FLAGS interviewed Jun Maekawa who runs a photo studio and has provided employment for orphaned children for 12 years
Inspired after hearing that children who graduated from orphanages had immense trouble finding suitable jobs or keeping jobs after being hired
Interview Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DsF602orBqk
https://www.businessinsider.jp/post-214691日本語Ver.
https://three-flags-kibou-noroshi.jimdosite.com/
Government is expanding budget for social care, but it is still impossible to have a perfect system
Social care that respects children's rights may only be realized through a combination of social institutions and a network of adults
THREE FLAGS emphasized "openness" and "employment support" of the facility, as well as aftercare after graduation
Felt that involvement from adults could change a person’s life