Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Scars remain 70 years after attack

Community pays tribute to victims

- MIKI TODA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NAGASAKI, Japan — Just after dawn Sunday, the faithful filed into Urakami Cathedral in the Japanese city of Nagasaki for a mass tinged with sadness.

Seventy years ago, a U.S.-dropped atomic bomb detonated about 500 metres from the church, killing two priests who were hearing confession­s and about 30 other people inside. The more than 70,000 who died in Nagasaki in the Aug. 9, 1945, bombing included 8,500 of the cathedral’s 12,000 parishione­rs, decimating Japan’s largest Christian community.

The church has been rebuilt from the rubble, and a sizable crowd entered the church to sit in the wooden pews for the early morning mass on Sunday. The women, many of them elderly, wore translucen­t white veils bordered with intricate lacework as they clasped their hands in prayer.

Later, on a sultry summer evening, the community held what has become an annual event: An outdoor procession with the scarred wooden head of a statue of the Virgin Mary that stood at the main altar at the time of the blast.

The bust, which was in three pieces, was put back together by woodwork artisan Isao Nishimura, who also built a new altar for it in a dedicated chapel next to the cathedral.

The artisan has his own story of survival and guilt.

On the morning of the bombing, his mother had scolded 12-year-old Nishimura for not going to confession at church.

The boy rushed to Urakami Cathedral and on the way, he passed some friends playing in a river and told them he would join them after quickly going to church.

Once there, he found a long line of people waiting their turn. Nishimura, a neighbourh­ood bully, cut in front of the line, glaring back at the little children, who gave him a dissatisfi­ed look.

By 11:02 a.m., when the bomb went off, he was at home with his mother and younger brother. He remembers a flash of light and being thrown to the ground. Part of a wall collapsed on his left arm.

Every year, when attending a memorial ceremony at his elementary school, Nishimura said he hears the voices of his classmates who didn’t make it.

“I wish they were here with me now to see how Japan has become a peaceful place,” he said.

A message from UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to a larger ceremony in Nagasaki on Sunday echoed calls by many in Japan to abolish nuclear weapons.

“I wholeheart­edly join you in sounding a global rallying cry: No more Nagasakis. No more Hiroshimas,” Ban said in a message read by Kim Won-soo, the acting UN high representa­tive for disarmamen­t affairs.

“I WISH THEY WERE HERE WITH ME NOW TO SEE HOW JAPAN HAS BECOME A PEACEFUL PLACE.”

ISAO NISHIMURA

 ?? EUGENE HOSHIKO/The Associated Press ?? A woman prays at an early morning mass Sunday at the Urakami Cathedral in Nagasaki for the victims of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki on Aug. 9, 1945. The bomb detonated
about 500 metres from the church, killing two priests and about 30 others inside.
EUGENE HOSHIKO/The Associated Press A woman prays at an early morning mass Sunday at the Urakami Cathedral in Nagasaki for the victims of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki on Aug. 9, 1945. The bomb detonated about 500 metres from the church, killing two priests and about 30 others inside.

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