copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
THE ORGANIZATION OF WOMEN ATOMIC BOMB VICTIMS IN OSAKA With the aid of peace organizations and informal contacts, they secured a list of offi- cially registered bomb victims in Osaka They began visiting wom- en in hospitals and at home and successfully attracted many of them to their early gatherings, characterized by "rivers of tears" as long-suppressed memories were externalized
Atomic Bomb Survivors - U. S. National Park Service Many thousands of people survived with injuries from the attacks They came to be known as hibakusha, which translates to bomb-affected-people Niju hibakusha, double survivors, applies to more than 160 people who were present at both Hiroshima and Nagasaki
6. My Life after the War and Hibakusha Gatherings | An A-bomb Survivor . . . At a firework festival held two years after the A-bombing, I met Kiyoshi Kikkawa He talked about the tragedy of the A-bombing, exposing his keloids to public view near the A-bomb Dome He was called “A-bomb Victim No 1 ” There was a sign in front of his store no better than a shack, saying, “Come here hibakusha!
Illegitimate Sufferers: A-Bomb Victims, Medical Science, and . . . - JSTOR Neither fourteen year-old Hayashi Ky?ko, the hibakusha author-to-be, nor sev enteen-year-old Takagi Shizuko, who became a cofounder of the Osaka group, sustained serious external injuries, but they received extensive doses of radiation because they were less than 2 kilometers from the hypocenter
After the atomic bomb: Hibakusha tell their stories They have each suffered and witnessed the horrific suffering of others caused by nuclear weapons, and their families may continue to suffer medical problems for generations to come Each calls for assurances that nuclear weapons will never be used again These are their stories