Albuquerque Journal

Urgency to bear witness grows for Hiroshima bombing survivors

Hopes for nuclear ban have not been fulfilled

- BY MARI YAMAGUCHI ASSOCIATED PRESS

HIROSHIMA, Japan — For nearly 70 years, until he turned 85, Lee Jong-keun hid his past as an atomic bomb survivor, fearful of the widespread discrimina­tion against blast victims that has long persisted in Japan.

But Lee, 92, is now part of a fastdwindl­ing group of survivors, known as hibakusha, that feels a growing urgency — desperatio­n even — to tell their stories. These last witnesses to what happened 75 years ago Thursday want to reach a younger generation that they feel is losing sight of the horror.

The knowledge of their dwindling time — the average age of the survivors is more than 83 and many suffer from the long-lasting effects of radiation — is coupled with deep frustratio­n over stalled progress in global efforts to ban nuclear weapons. According to a recent Asahi newspaper survey of 768 survivors, nearly two-thirds said their wish for a nuclear-free world is not widely shared by the rest of humanity, and more than 70% called on a reluctant Japanese government to ratify a nuclear weapons ban treaty.

“We must work harder to get our voices heard, not just mine but those of many other survivors,” Lee said in an interview Tuesday at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum. “A nuclear weapons ban is the starting point for peace.”

“All lives are equal,” he added. ”As someone who has faced harsh discrimina­tion, that’s the other lesson I want to pass on to younger people.”

The first U.S. atomic bombing killed 140,000 people in Hiroshima. A second atomic attack on Nagasaki on Aug. 9, 1945, killed another 70,000. Japan surrendere­d on Aug. 15.On the morning of Aug. 6, 1945, 16-yearold Lee, a second-generation Korean born in Japan, was on his way to work at Japan’s national railway authority in Hiroshima when the uranium bomb nicknamed Little Boy exploded. The whole sky turned yellowish orange, knocking him face first to the ground, Lee said. He suffered severe burns on his neck that took four months to heal.

Back at work, co-workers wouldn’t go near him, saying he had “A-bomb disease.” Little was known about the effects of the bomb, and some believed radiation was similar to an infectious disease. Prospectiv­e marriage partners also worried about genetic damage that could be passed to children.

Lee had been bullied at school because of his Korean background. Revealing that he was also an A-bomb victim would have meant more trouble. So Lee lived under a

Japanese name, Masaichi Egawa, until eight years ago, when he first publicly revealed his identity during a cruise where atomic bomb survivors shared their stories. Until then, he hadn’t even told his wife he is hibakusha.

Japanese bomb survivors had no government support until 1957, when their yearslong efforts won official medical support. But a strict screening system has left out many who are still seeking compensati­on. Assistance for survivors outside Japan was delayed until the 1980s.

“I can’t live for another 50 years,” said Koko Kondo, 75, who was an 8-month-old baby in her mother’s arms when their house collapsed from the blast about half a mile away. “I want each child to live a full life, and that means we have to abolish nuclear weapons right now.”

Even after so many years, too many nuclear weapons remain, Kondo said, adding, “We are not screaming loud enough for the whole world to hear.”

Kondo, who survived the blast as a baby, is the daughter of the Rev. Kiyoshi Tanimoto, one of six atomic bomb survivors featured in John Hersey’s book “Hiroshima.” She struggled for decades until she reached middle age to overcome the pain she experience­d in her teens and the rejection by her fiance.

She was almost 40 when she decided to follow her father’s path and become a peace activist. She was inspired by his last sermon, in which he spoke about devoting his life to Hiroshima’s recovery.

This year, the frustratio­n of survivors is greater because peace events leading up to the Aug. 6 memorial have been largely canceled or scaled back amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

For the first time in over a decade, Keiko Ogura won’t provide English guided tours of Hiroshima’s Peace Park.

Ogura was 8 when she saw the searing bright flash outside her house, about 1.2 miles from ground zero. Smashed to the ground, she was awakened by her little brother’s wails. The rubble of their house was burning.

Crowds of people with severe burns, their hair charred into curls, headed to a shrine near her home, grunting and asking for water. Two people dropped dead after receiving water from her, a scene that haunted her for years. She blamed herself for surviving when so many others died.

Ogura’s relatives and friends told her to hide her status as a hibakusha or nobody would marry her. She kept her past to herself for decades, until her husband, a peace activist, died and she decided to continue his efforts. She set up a group of interprete­rs for peace.

Her relatives don’t want her to mention them in her speeches. “Why? Because people are still suffering,” Ogura, 83, said in a recent online briefing. “The impact of radiation, the fear of it and the suffering were not just felt during the moment of the blast — we still live with it today.”

Survivors are frustrated by their inability to see a nuclear-free world in their lifetime, and by Japan’s refusal to sign or ratify a nuclear weapons ban treaty enacted in 2017.

“For me, the war is not over yet,” said Michiko Kodama, 82, who survived the bombing but has lost most of her relatives to cancer. Years after the atomic bombing, a receptioni­st at a clinic noted Kodama’s “hibakusha” medical certificat­e in a loud voice, and a patient sitting next to her moved away.

The fear of death, prejudice and discrimina­tion continues, and nuclear weapons still exist.

“We don’t have much time left. … I want to tell our story to the younger generation­s when I still can,” Kodama said. “If someone wants to hear my story, I will go anywhere and talk.”

 ?? EUGENE HOSHIKO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Atomic Bomb Dome. The building was registered as a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1996 to call for world peace and outlawing nuclear weapons.
EUGENE HOSHIKO/ASSOCIATED PRESS The Atomic Bomb Dome. The building was registered as a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1996 to call for world peace and outlawing nuclear weapons.
 ?? EUGENE HOSHIKO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lee Jong-keun shows where he was on Kojin Bridge at the moment the atomic bomb exploded in Hiroshima. He suffered severe burns on his neck that took four months to heal.
EUGENE HOSHIKO/ASSOCIATED PRESS Lee Jong-keun shows where he was on Kojin Bridge at the moment the atomic bomb exploded in Hiroshima. He suffered severe burns on his neck that took four months to heal.

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