One man who entered Hiroshima after the bomb recalled in the exhibition, “that dreadful scene – I cannot forget even after may decades”.Ī woman who was 25 years-old at the time, said, “when I went outside, it was dark as night. They fell down with a thud and died one after another”, adding, “still now I often have nightmares about this, and people say, ‘it’s neurosis’”. She was located just two kilometres from the Hiroshima epicentre.įleeing to her relatives in Hesaka, at age 24 another woman remembers that “ people, with the skin dangling down, were stumbling along. I regained my senses at her cries and found no-one else was on the train”, a 34-year-old woman testifies in the booklet. “On an overcrowded train on the Hakushima line, I fainted for a while, holding in my arms my eldest daughter of one year and six months. ‘Absolute evil’Ī group of elderly hibakusha, called Nihon Hidankyo, have dedicated their lives to achieving a non-proliferation treaty, which they hope will ultimately lead to a total ban on nuclear weapons. These brave survivors testify that peace cannot be achieved ever, through the use of nuclear weapons. “The next morning, we carried their bodies out of the shelter, but their faces were so swollen and black that we couldn’t tell them apart, so laid them out on the ground according to height and decided their identities according to their size”. It vividly brings to life the devastation and havoc wreaked by those first atomic bombs (A-bombs), and their successor weapons, the more powerful hydrogen bombs (H-bombs) which began testing in the 1950s. To highlight the tireless work of the survivors, known in Japanese as the hibakusha, the UN’s Office for Disarmament Affairs, created an exhibition at UN Headquarters in New York which has just come to a close, entitled: Three Quarters of a Century After Hiroshima and Nagasaki: The Hibakusha-Brave Survivors Working for a Nuclear-Free World. “This was truly a living hell, I thought, and the cruel sights still stay in my mind”. The death of a human is a solemn and sad thing, but I didn’t have the time to think about it because I had to collect their bones and dispose of their bodies”, a then 25-year-old woman said in a recorded testimony, 1.5 km from Hiroshima’s ground zero. “The Red Cross hospital was full of dead bodies. Those first nuclear weapons deployed by the United States, indiscriminately killed tens of thousands of non-combatants but also left indelible scars for the immediate survivors, that they, their children and grandchildren still carry today.
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