Japanese retiree Teruko Nakazawa devoted decades to supervising and helping rehabilitate convicted criminals on parole. The 83-year-old didn't take a single yen for her hard work under a long-running but little-known state scheme that some say contributes to the nation's famously low crime rate.
Category
🗞
NewsTranscript
00:00with them.
00:01It's not just pregnant women.
00:02It's a big problem.
00:03And then you have to find the right resources.
00:04So you have to really find your way through that.
00:47We all don't realize that we can be safe if we don't do anything about it.
01:07It's not that I'm afraid of being scolded.
01:10I'm afraid of being betrayed.
01:13I don't want to feel guilty.
01:16I don't want to feel guilty about what I've done.
01:20That's what I'm afraid of.
01:24Welcome.
01:28I'll take it.
01:31As I got to know her, I realized why she became like that.
01:36As I got to know her and her family, I began to sympathize with her.
01:49I began to sympathize with her.
01:58I began to think,
02:01I began to sympathize with her.
02:06She was a very kind and kind person.
02:11She was a very kind and kind person.
02:16She was a very kind and kind person.
02:20When I asked her if she wanted to be a nurse, she said,
02:23When I asked her if she wanted to be a nurse, she said,
02:26she was afraid of being scolded.
02:30When we talked about Otsu, she was even more afraid of being scolded.