Cape Breton Post

A-bomb survivor keeps up fight for nuclear disarmamen­t

75 years since atomic bombs dropped on Japan

- AKIKO OKAMOTO

TOKYO - Terumi Tanaka was 13 when a U.S. warplane dropped a plutonium bomb on the southern Japanese city of Nagasaki, on Aug. 9, 1945.

Sitting at home with a book that morning, Tanaka knew instantly when his surroundin­gs turned a blinding bright white that the massive boom was not one of the air raids he had gotten accustomed to in the waning days of World War Two.

“I felt this was something terrible, so I ran downstairs and ducked, covered my ears and closed my eyes,” Tanaka, now 88, told Reuters. “And at that moment, I lost consciousn­ess.”

Just 3.2 km (from the epicentre, Tanaka was miraculous­ly unharmed, as were his mother and two sisters. Tanaka’s father had died of illness previously.

Tanaka’s grandfathe­r, aunt and uncle weren’t as lucky.

Three days after the 10,000pound bomb, nicknamed “Fat Man”, exploded over the city, Tanaka ventured towards the epicentre to check on his relatives.

It was only then that the scale of the calamity sank in.

Buildings in the city had been reduced to charred piles of rubble and twisted metal, a vast expanse of land was wiped out, and corpses and burn victims with flesh peeling off their bones littered the ground. His grandfathe­r was one of them: Tanaka dabbed a wet handkerchi­ef to his mouth, which appeared to silently cry out for water. That was their last encounter.

Three days after the hydrogen bomb attack in Hiroshima, the Nagasaki blast killed about 27,000 instantly and more than 70,000 by the end of the year. Japan surrendere­d six days later.

For nearly 50 years, Tanaka has been speaking out for nuclear disarmamen­t hoping that his experience­s as a witness to one of the only two nuclear bombs ever to be used in conflict would serve to end their potential use.

In this 75th year since the war ended, the coronaviru­s pandemic has disrupted some key events, such as a New York exhibition that Tanaka helped to organise.

Instead, Tanaka, who served as head of the “Hidankyo” victims’ group for more than 20 years, has turned online to spread his message, with the unexpected benefit of reaching a broader audience.

But he worries that time is running out.

“After all the atomic bomb survivors are gone, I’m worried whether people will be able to really understand what we have experience­d,” he said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Terumi Tanaka, a Nagasaki atomic bombing survivor and co-chairperso­n of Nihon Hidankyo, a country-wide organizati­on of atomic and hydrogen bomb sufferers, poses for a photograph during an interview with Reuters at the Nihon Hidankyo office in Tokyo.
REUTERS Terumi Tanaka, a Nagasaki atomic bombing survivor and co-chairperso­n of Nihon Hidankyo, a country-wide organizati­on of atomic and hydrogen bomb sufferers, poses for a photograph during an interview with Reuters at the Nihon Hidankyo office in Tokyo.

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