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From Swansea to Niigata
16 November 2001

Eleanor Oguma It’s pretty rare for people in Britain to see a woman dressed in Welsh national costume, and even rarer for people in Japan. But Archers listener Eleanor Oguma has done her best to educate the Japanese about that bit of Britain to the left of Birmingham.

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Eleanor spreading the Welsh word


Brought up in Swansea, Eleanor gained a scholarship to the sixth form at Rugby School (Nigel Pargetter’s alma mater, by coincidence): "I did French, German and Economics A Level, and we all had to do some additional studies, which included things like jewellery making or music performance", she explains. "They didn’t offer Russian, which I really wanted to do, but they did do Japanese, so I went for that. I had an interesting teacher, and I really enjoyed it."

In fact, Eleanor enjoyed it so much that after Rugby she took a degree in the subject at Durham University. She had heard The Archers before (at the age of six on a family holiday in the Low Countries in a converted Sherpa van), but it was at Durham that she really got hooked on the programme.

"I remember when Tony found John by the tractor. I rushed up to my friend Vicky’s room and we both said ‘Is he dead?’"

To Japan

Armed with her degree, Eleanor took a job on an exchange scheme in the Japanese city of Joetsu. "I worked in the local government offices, in their international relations section." As well as translating, she taught English - using, among other things that favourite Japanese pastime karaoke, which seemed to involve the Carpenters song "Top of the World" rather a lot.

"I also organised events, and I tried to teach people a bit about Wales, which is how a woman in Welsh national costume could be seen in Japan from time to time."

Heavy Metal

Eleanor and Hiroki Oguma One day, Eleanor went to a party as part of an international festival and met a young man who was also in national costume: "There was this chap called Hiroki wearing a skirt - the traditional ethnic dress of the Karen people of Burma. He was in charge of the wine, and as I like my drink I saw a lot of him that evening! We got chatting about human rights in Burma, and we found we both liked heavy metal music."



Eleanor and her husband Hiroki Oguma


After the party, Hiroki, who is a salesman for an educational supplies company, emailed Eleanor. They stared going out, and the mutual liking for Iron Maiden eventually proved so strong that they married. Eleanor moved about 80 miles up Japan’s western coast to Niigata, to a new job as a research assistant for the Economic Research Institute for NE Asia.

On the Web

While in Japan, Eleanor initially kept in touch with events in Ambridge through the synopses on The Archers website, and heard the programme on her occasional visits back to the UK. When the episodes were made available in Real Audio, she started to listen to them on her laptop, at 10 or 11 in the evening, Japan time.

One day she followed a link from the Archers home page to the programme’s message board: "At the time, a lot of female listeners were saying how much they liked Brian, and I thought ‘What?!’ I suppose I can see it a bit more now - that sardonic edge."

Eleanor soon became a regular contributor to the message board, relating the exploits of an Archers listener in Japan. "It’s a lovely atmosphere on the board - very friendly. It’s like chatting in people’s rooms at university, discussing things from the serious to the trivial".

After three years in Japan, Eleanor feels very much at home there. "I feel I fit in. It’s weird when I go back home now. I know the rules for living in Japan - I don’t really know them in Britain." And asked if there are any similarities between the Welsh and the Japanese, Eleanor thinks for a moment. "Well, they both have a tendency to sing a lot when they’ve been drinking."

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