As the United States contemplates using
weapons of mass destruction in the current
conflict, let us learn what the original
bomb did in Japan. In this brief article, you
will hear the testimonies of the Hibakusha
(atomic bomb survivors).
I went to Japan in the ’80s to learn more
fully what the effect of our atom bombing
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki had been. I
learned it was horrifying. Nobody knew
what had hit them. People died instantly,
or walked blindly in the streets naked, with
their skin hanging in shreds. Many leapt
into the river and drowned.
I interviewed survivors wherever I could
find them in their homes, at special
meetings, in the hospital. In Nagasaki,
Hibakusha invited me to stay with them. I
did.
On August 6, 1945 only nine days short of
the Pacific War-an ugly bomb called “Little
Boy”, which contained 1 kg. of Uranium
230, was dropped from an American B 29
bomber called the “Enola Gay” and
exploded in midair above Hiroshima. It had
the equivilant of 20 thousand tons of TNT,
a massive blow. Radiation made its debut as
a lethal weapon in the history of war.
570 meters above the center of this city, a
sun of 300,000 degrees centigrade suddenly
flashed, and 6/l0ths of a second later, a
fireball with a diameter of 180 meters
emerged. The ground temperature was
6,000 degrees centigrade, and the blast of
the bomb tore down all structures after one
day and night.
Hiroshima was turned into ashes and trash.
One fourth of the total population of
400,000 people died instantly. 240,000
more were ultimately lost because 1000 rads
of radiation had penetrated their bodies.
THE HIBAKUSHA TESTIMONIES:
“Somebody! Please help! Don’t bother with
me! Just this child!”
“The tramcar was blown off the rails by the
blast. Some managed to escape, but those
left inside were burned to death.”
“Fleeing from the fire in the streets,
people jumped into the river. Many
of them were so weak, they drifted
into the sea and drowned.”
“A mother was shouting her child’s
name in a high shrieking voice.
None of the children dying around
her seemed to be her child.”
“The little girl crouched, and
leaning against the stone bank of the
river, died in this posture. No one
came to save her.”
“Due to the bomb blast, dust and
fission products swirled up into the
sky. Some hours later, the “black
rain” fell, baptizing the citizens with
a second radiation.”
“Thousands died after being taken to
an island in the inland sea. There a
burial for thousands was temporarily
erected.”
“From nearby villages and towns, thousands
of people headed for Hiroshima to extend
help.”
“The fire went to the fringe of the city and
continued to burn all night. Morning came.
Fire was still smoldering in Hiroshima. It
entered the city. Many people were dead in
the fire-prevention water tank. Their
bodies were scorched black. I saw a dead
woman, her body scorched black, holding a
dead child in her arms, still in her arms,
still in running position.”
“A thirty-four year old father had to
cremate his three-year-old daughter,
Hisako. He remembers. Her fat burned and
melted. The flames formed a pillar. Truly
this is hell.”
“A single doctor treated several hundred
fire-burnt patients. Zinc, oil, and gauze
were used up immediately. Treatment was a
mere allocation of Mercurochrome. What
good did it do?”
“Maggots swarmed on burns. An infant
crawls to an unconscious mother’s breast.”
“Two weeks passed. Those who had not
been injured but were within 8/10th of a
mile radius noticed their hair started to fall
out. Half of these people died.”
“Purpura, a purple spot disease, appeared
among the victims. The capillaries were
destroyed and the blood lost its capacity to
coagulate. These were called death-spots.”
Thirty years later, the city of Hiroshima
was beautifully restored. An Italian
peacemaker, Danilo Dolci, remarked: “This
is a testimony to the most stupid thing
humanity can do. The ruins should have
been left as they were, and not reconstructed.”
The message from Hiroshima to all people
was: “Rest in peace; we shall not repeat this
sin.”
Alas, we are threatening the world to do
this again. Is this what you want to have
happen? Is there any cause worth bombing
anyone? Is there any cause worth beginning
a war? |