As Japan marks 75 years since the devastating attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the last generation of nuclear bomb survivors is working to ensure their message lives on after them.
The “hibakusha” — literally “person affected by the bomb” — have for decades been a powerful voice calling for the abolition of nuclear weapons.
There are an estimated 136,700 left, many of whom were infants or soon to be born at the time of the attacks.
Photo: AP
The average age of a survivor now is a little over 83, according to the Japanese Ministry of Health, lending an urgency as they share their testimonies and call for a ban on nuclear weapons.
“What we hibakusha are saying is we can’t repeat” a nuclear attack, 88-year-old Terumi Tanaka, who survived the Nagasaki bombing, told reporters ahead of the anniversaries. “To this end, we have to let people know what we experienced, for them to hear the facts.”
Tanaka was 13 when the bomb hit his hometown. The attack on Nagasaki killed 74,000 people and came three days after a first bomb devastated the city of Hiroshima, killing 140,000.
He has spent much of his life sharing his experience, hoping that explaining the horrors of nuclear weapons will convince people to support a ban.
However, he recognizes that the community of those who lived through the attacks is shrinking and their message will have to be passed on by others.
“We will all pass away, eventually,” Tanaka said. “We set up a group called the No More Hibakusha Project, which works on preserving records as archives, including what we’ve written ... so that [the next generation] can use them in their campaigns.”
Tanaka said he worries at times that interest is fading, acknowledging that speeches by hibakusha often attract no more than a handful of people.
“We do our best, but if no one comes, it’s a swing and a miss,” he said.
At 74, Jiro Hamasumi is among the youngest survivors of the attacks. His mother was pregnant with him in Hiroshima when the bomb struck.
It killed his father, most likely instantaneously, and claimed several other relatives in the aftermath.
“Not a day goes by when I don’t think about my father,” he told reporters.
His knowledge of the attack comes from the accounts of his siblings, who described the dizzying flash and ear-splitting roar that formed the first indication the bomb known as Little Boy had detonated.
His father was at work when the bomb hit, just a few hundred meters from the epicenter. Hamasumi’s mother and siblings tried to reach his office the day after, but were forced back by the “heat and smell of burned flesh.”
When they finally reached his father’s office, they found only “something resembling his body.”
All they could retrieve were a few metal items that survived the flames — a belt buckle, a key and part of his wallet.
Hamasumi, who was born in February 1946, escaped the physical effects experienced by many children exposed to radiation in the womb, but the attack has defined his life and he has spent decades campaigning against nuclear weapons.
“To me, the nuclear umbrella only means the mushroom cloud,” Hamasumi said. “Hibakusha want the United States to apologize to us, but the proof of the apology is nuclear abolition, we’re not after vengeance.”
As the hibakusha age, they are passing the baton to young activists, many from Hiroshima and Nagasaki, who have grown up steeped in the memories of survivors.
Mitsuhiro Hayashida, 28, is the grandchild of a Nagasaki hibakusha and organizes events for survivors to share their stories.
He also helps oversee an international online petition for a ban on nuclear weapons, which has garnered more than 11 million signatures.
However, he too worries that the attacks are fading from collective memory.
“Today, the children and grandchildren of survivors, like me, are campaigning, but the weight of our words is probably less than half of the testimonies of survivors,” he told reporters. “We really need the world to move toward nuclear abolition while atomic bomb survivors are alive.”
That desire is what animates Keiko Ogura, who turns 83 this week and was just eight when the bomb struck Hiroshima.
“We are aging and don’t know when our time will come,” she told journalists last month. “We old hibakusha want to see nuclear abolition as soon as possible, because we want to report it to those who died when we see them” in the afterlife.
Australian scientists have raised questions over the efficacy of the AstraZeneca and University of Oxford COVID-19 vaccine in establishing herd immunity, calling for a pause on its widespread rollout as the country recorded one new case of the virus yesterday. Opposition to the vaccine casts a cloud over Australia’s immunization plans, with 53 million doses of the AstraZeneca jab already on hand. “The question is really whether it is able to provide herd immunity. We are playing a long game here. We don’t know how long that will take,” Australian and New Zealand Society for Immunology president Stephen Turner said. Turner added
A racing pigeon has survived an extraordinary 13,000km Pacific Ocean crossing from the US to find a new home in Australia. Now authorities consider the bird a quarantine risk and plan to kill it. Kevin Celli-Bird yesterday said he discovered that the exhausted bird that arrived in his Melbourne backyard on Dec. 26 last year had disappeared from a race in the US state of Oregon on Oct. 29. Experts suspect the pigeon that Celli-Bird has named Joe — after US president-elect Joe Biden — hitched a ride on a cargo ship to cross the Pacific. Joe’s feat has attracted the attention
A persistent blizzard on Saturday blanketed large parts of Spain with an unusual amount of snow, killing at least four people and leaving thousands trapped in vehicles or at train stations and airports that suspended all services. The national weather agency reported that as of 7am, the snowfall in Madrid reached a level unseen in a half-century. More than 50cm of snow fell in the Spanish capital, the weather agency AEMET said. The bodies of a man and woman were recovered by the Andalucia region emergency service after their car was washed away by a flooded river near the town of Fuengirola.
China has recorded the biggest daily jump in COVID-19 cases in more than five months, despite four cities in lockdown, increased testing and other measures aimed at preventing another wave of infections in the world’s second-biggest economy. Most of the new infections were reported near the capital, Beijing, but a province in northeast China also saw a rise in new cases, official data showed yesterday, amid a resurgence that has seen more than 28 million people under home quarantine. The Chinese National Health Commission said in a statement that a total of 115 new confirmed cases were reported in the country, compared