| Sister City - Tondabayashi
Even though Bethlehem,
Pennsylvania and Tondabayashi, Japan are on opposite sides
of the globe, they happen to share a number of interesting
similarities. Both cities are bisected by a river, with mountains
on the horizon. Both have an economic mix of agriculture,
service and manufacturing. Both share a strong sense of history
and culture. And both have a Christmas connection: Bethlehem
as "Christmas City, U.S.A.," and Tondabayashi as the former
home of a leading manufacturer of glass Christmas ornaments.
In 1959, The Reverend Kenneth Heim, who attended Lehigh
University, accepted a transfer to Tokyo, Japan. During his
stay, Rev. Heim met and became friends with a gentleman from
Tondabayashi. The friends visited each other's cities and
then encouraged their friends to make similar visits. The
ripple effect from that first visit continues to this day.
In 1964, the relationship became somewhat more structured.
In Tondabayashi, a city official was appointed to head a Sister
City Association; in Bethlehem, the mayor offered the project
to the Jaycees. The Bethlehem arrangement evolved to become
a sister city committee consisting of prominent area residents
Bernard Cohen, Laurence Fenninger and John Strohmeyer.
On one of their visits to Tondabayashi, Mr. and Mrs. Fenninger
met Yoshinaga Sakon, one of Japan's outstanding landscape
architects. They formed a close friendship, which resulted
in Mr. Sakon giving to the city of Bethlehem in 1971 a tea
house and garden. They were placed next to the Bethlehem Area
Public Library and the area was named the "Garden of Serenity."
Its oversight is the responsibility of the Bethlehem-Tondabayashi
Sister City Commission and it is maintained through the generous
efforts of the Bethlehem Garden Club and the City's Parks
Department.
In 1972, Bethlehem City Council formally established the
Bethlehem-Tondabayashi Sister City Commission "to promote
friendship and understanding between Bethlehem and Tondabayashi,
to exchange cultural interests, to promote trade interests
and tourism, and to oversee a Student Exchange Program between
Bethlehem and its Japanese sister city of Tondabayashi." Commission
members are appointed by City Council for renewable two-year
terms and hold monthly meetings in the Tondabayashi Room of
the Bethlehem Area Public Library. The Tondabayashi Room houses
the beautiful gifts given to the Commission over the past
30-plus years by its sister city.
The Student Exchange Program is the most important of the
commission's activities. Since 1971, more than 80 young people
have traveled to live with sister city host families, learning
about each other's way of life. In odd-numbered years, five
Bethlehem students, ages 16 to 20, travel to Tondabayashi;
during the even-numbered years, Bethlehem families host five
Tondabayashi students. The exchanges usually take place at
the end of July and the beginning of August.
The commission hosts a number of activities for the students
during their stay - a tea ceremony; picnics, white water rafting,
a South Side Bethlehem crafts day, a day at Dorney Park, "American
English" classes, and trips to New York City, Philadelphia,
Lancaster and Washington, D.C. Host families add to the enjoyment
with their own activities, many shared with the other students
and host families. The visit concludes with a farewell dinner
for students and host families at the Stabler Observation
Tower.
The Bethlehem-Tondabayashi Sister City Commission also participates
in area festivals and parades and sponsors an annual bus trip
to a Japanese garden. It is currently developing a traveling
exhibit for area schools and international cultural programs.
To learn more about becoming a host family or how to apply to
become an exchange student, visit the Commission's web site
at www.bethlehem-tondabayashi.org
or contact Jane Schaffer, Commission Chair, at 610 861-1348
or janes@moravian.edu.
For more information about our sister city, ,
visit their website at http://www.kiis.or.jp/kansaida/tondabayashi/index-e.html
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