green tara nmazca.blog
embedded in the floating world








20050717

"Many people are dead. Those people's souls aren't happy. Why are you celebrating?"

Shigeko Sasamori hopes her scarred body and gnarled fingers put a human face on the suffering caused by the creation of the atomic bomb, a weapon that was first tested 60 years ago in the New Mexico desert.

The 73-year-old woman was a schoolgirl on Aug. 6, 1945, when an American warplane dropped over Hiroshima the first of two nuclear bombs used against Japan.

She traveled to New Mexico this past week for the 60th anniversary of the atomic tests at Trinity to ask scientists to stop nuclear warfare.

"I want to talk to their hearts and beg them not to do it," she said Friday.

shigeko sasamori, hiroshima bomb survivor
Hiroshima survivor Shigeko Sasamori, 73
,
recounts the day that her city had the first atom bomb
dropped on it as she visits with reporters
in Albuquerque, N.M., Friday, July 15, 2005.


When the bomb exploded, Sasamori said she and a friend were preparing to join a work crew to clear a city street less than a mile from ground zero. Her 13-year-old companion was killed in the blast.

"I saw that everybody looked so terrible, just like they came from hell," she said. "No one was talking. No one was screaming."

She believes now that she was in shock as she followed the crowd to escape the burning city. Five days later, Sasamori's mother found her in a nearby school.

One-fourth of Sasamori's body was burned. Her fingers were scorched to the bone, and she had as many as 30 operations to repair the damage. Three years ago, she underwent surgery for intestinal cancer. Doctors now suspect she has thyroid cancer.

Sasamori was one of 25 "Hiroshima Maidens" brought to the United States for reconstructive surgery in 1955 by American editor and author Norman Cousins, who she describes as her adoptive father. She eventually settled in the U.S. and became a nurse.

Sasamori, who now lives in Marina del Rey, Calif., said she is not angry with Americans for how World War II ended, but hates war itself and is saddened by the actions of those who made the bomb.

But she was upset about a $125-per-ticket event at the National Atomic Museum [called "Blast from the Past?!"] in Albuquerque on Friday.

Participants were given a secret identity at the door of the museum, a gimmick meant to recall the top-secret project to develop the bomb. Guests were treated to food, a cash bar, a 1940s fashion show, slides of the Trinity test and a panel discussion by historians and test participants. On Saturday, they were taken to the test site in southern New Mexico for a tour.

"Many people are dead. Those people's souls aren't happy. Why are you celebrating?" Sasamori said. "You are making a weapon to kill us. So, I feel that's not appropriate to celebrate."

A museum spokeswoman did not return a voice mail message, and no one answered several phone calls to the museum.

On Aug. 6, Sasamori said she will mark the 60th anniversary of the attack on Hiroshima with a more subdued ceremony: a moment of silence in her hometown to remember the dead.
"Many people are dead. Those people's souls aren't happy. Why are you celebrating?"
mr damon 10:27



Truly a very sad, sad thing. But...I wonder if the people in Japan ever pay tribute to the many that were slaughtered by their cowardly attack on Pearl Harbor??

 
Compare the fatalities and reconsider who has the larger responsibility for mourning.

Human Crises in Comparison

 
Post a Comment







don't tread on me, either.
"Don't tread on me, either."

hunter stockton thompson, 1937-2005
HST 1937-2005


archive links below
olde booqmarx
del.icio.us-ness

human crises
more words

22 over 7
nmazca
email

feedburner
Subscribe with Bloglines

xml

public
discourse

the 18½ minute gap

2600

american samizdat

antipixel

bellaciao

black box voting

cryptome

did you know...?

disinformation

gonzo report

gringos peligros
{u.s. weapons
of mass destruction}

hack-a-day

infosthetics

languagehat

learning to be stupid
in the culture of cash

magpie

mostly africa

nippon goro goro

notes from somewhere bizarre

playahata

robot wisdom

spitting image

thirdredeye

turning the tide

veiled4allah

worldchanging

your negro tour guide
{archived, though}

xispas

youngfox

yukihime

zoomata




metanet

<<blackblogz>>

blogdex

del.icio.us

metafilter

popdex

seablogs

the world as a blog




daily media;
media on media

al jazeera

all africa

alternative press index

alternet

asia times

bangkok post

bernama

bbc online

corpwatch

counterpunch

democracy now!

earthtimes

east africa news

electronic frontier foundation

financial times

frankfurter allgemeine zeitung

geist

the griot

guardian unlimited

gulf times

haaretz

independent media center

international socialist review

iraq uncensored

jakarta post

journalism tutorial

khaleej times

kiplinger letter

le monde

mainichi shimbun

mediachannel

media chin-check

media lens

the memory hole

mexonline

middle east online

new scientist

news dissector

newseum front pages

newsmap

news of the weird

oneworld

outlook india

people's daily

the power
of nightmares

(bbc documentary)

qatar news agency

reporters sans frontieres

resurgence

reuters

rose-colored news

seeing black

stamen

state of the media

the sun

taipei times

testy copy editors

theocracy watch

times of india

tomdispatch

truthout

el universal

vanuatu news online

west africa news

who owns what

xinhua online

yahoo news photos

yellow times

yes!

yomiuri shimbun

znet




reference
materials
and other
resources

alternative writing
and shorthand systems

area codes by number

astronomical glossary

babelfish

barebones guide to html

chinese-english online dictionary

extisp.icio.us

fourmilab

global maps

international dialing codes

iso 8859-1 character set

japanese baby names

jewish encyclopedia

merriam-webster dictionary

oishii

opte project

seattle public library

touchgraph googlebrowser

word origins

world gazetteer population data

zipdecode



Previously...
11.02
12.02
01.03
02.03
03.03
04.03
05.03
06.03
07.03
08.03
09.03
10.03
11.03
12.03
01.04
02.04
03.04
04.04
05.04
06.04
07.04
08.04
09.04
10.04
11.04
12.04
01.05
02.05
03.05
04.05
05.05
06.05
07.05
08.05
09.05
10.05
11.05
12.05
01.06


The WeatherPixie
seattle dark sky clock

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

Creative Commons License

Kinja profile for Dr. Overtone
Listed on BlogShares
Listed on Blogwise
seattle weblog portal
globe of blogs
GeoURL
mr. damon's stumbleupon site

blogdex profiletechnorati profile
tigersushi

**