Over
50 years ago, an eleven-year-old American Girl Scout named Libby Watson and a
seventeen-year-old Japanese Girl Scout named Hiroko Tanaka gave the customary
Scouting salute and shook hands. The moment was captured forever in The United States-Japan
Girl Scout Friendship Statue, which was dedicated on March 18th 1962
to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of Girl Scouting in the United States,
and as a welcome back to the Girl Scouts of Japan from the World Association of
Girl Guides and Girl Scouts.
Resting
in Yamashita Park in Yokohama, the statue has become a beloved, much-visited
tourist attraction. On November 7th of this year, it will reunite
the two Girl Scouts it depicts, 52 years after they made their mutual salute.
Watson
returned home to the United States in 1965 and went on to pursue a successful
career in public service, reaching important city management roles in Fort Worth,
Austin, and San Diego. Watson later admitted that the creation of the statue
was "very meaningful." However it was a subject she rarely brought
up, while in Japan people slowly forgot about the girls who posed for the
statue. Hiroko stayed in Yokohama and eventually became an artist.
Watson
told her story to Sandy Kautz, who went on to write an article for the 1992
magazine, Girl Scouts Leaders. In 2006, a former Yokohama Girl Scout, who
fondly remembered the statue from her childhood, found an old copy. Kajima-Best
shared the story at an exchange program between American and Japanese Girl
Scouts in Yokohama, prompting a search for Libby and Hiroko, and eventually a
celebration dubbed the Girl Scout Handshake Project. The Girl Scout Handshake
Project raised funds in Japan and the United States to bring the girls back
together for a rededication of the famous statue.
Here
at Big Statues, we’re always happy to hear stories of how these wonderful
monuments form enduring memories in people’s minds and help to forge ties
between nations. As Watson reflected: "It's not me. It's not Hiroko. It
symbolizes the friendship between Girl Scouts of Japan and Girl Scouts of the
United States; it symbolizes something very special."
We
hope that our own life
size statues will leave a similar mark on the world.
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