Sei-MAguro1221
Introduction: Tourist Brochure
Welcome to an island of history and memory-Anba Island
~Listen to the tide, and the whispers of time~
Origins
Once called Awanami Island, this place was a waypoint for ancient travelers and ascetics. Old texts describe it as a "vanishing sacred land," said to appear and disappear with the wind.
Renamed in the Edo period as "Anba" ("peaceful waves"), some believe the "storm" it wards off refers not to weather, but to time itself.
Records also note sudden tidal shifts, a strange illness, and mass suicides. The mainland has long called it "the island where people and time go astray."
Wartime Remains
In WWII's final days, the island became a defensive outpost, with bunkers and an airstrip. Ruins still remain, especially on Mount Chihaya.
Discovered after the war: military watches, all stopped at August 1st, 12:00 AM.
Folklore
At Hachiya Shrine, legend says a god comes each August to "borrow" human memories. Though the ritual ended in the 1950s, rumors linger:
"People vanish overnight."
"The same day repeats."
An elder once said:
"Here, summer doesn't fade-it pulls you in. And once it does... it devours you."
Visitor Notes
Many areas lack mobile signal.
Watch malfunctions reported near Mount Chihaya.
Descend mountains by 5 PM. Sometimes, "the paths change."
This summer, be careful what you remember.
-Anba Island Tourism Office