JAPAN: KOREANS COMMEMORATE VICTIMS OF HIROSHIMA A BOMB
Korean/Nat
Koreans gathered in Hiroshima, Japan on Monday to commemorate their nationals who were killed by the worlds first atomic bombing.
Among the 200-thousand people killed in the Hiroshima bombing more than 20- thousand were Korean.
But the 51st anniversary was shrouded in controversy between north and south Koreans who are disputing the inscriptions on the Korean A-bomb monument.
As dawn broke over Hiroshima, Koreans were preparing to remember fellow countrymen killed by the worlds first atomic bombing attack.
51 years ago tomorrow (Tuesday), on August 6, 1945, an U-S atomic bomb devastated the city of Hiroshima.
Shoho Kim, a Korean survivor of the atomic bomb, still has very vivid memories of that day.
The 69-year-old Kim was working at Hiroshima city hall when he saw the sky lighten followed by a strong wind.
Then it became very dark, as dark as dusk, according to Kim, who shortly after walked around in the streets, where he was confronted with horrific images.
SOUNDBITE: (Japanese)
There were people from young to the aged, walking around in the streets. They looked around. From young kids to the aged were walking around with their skin melting and they did not have faces. It was as if I was looking at real ghosts.
SUPER CAPTION: Shoho Kim, Korean atomic bomb survivor
On Monday, a day before the main commemorations of this pivotal day in history, Koreans held their separate ceremony.
The Korean memorial, attended by about 100 people, was held at a monument to the Korean dead near Hiroshima's Peace Park.
After the war, the city of Hiroshima created a park near what was the center of the blast, and built a memorial to all victims of the bombing.
But Korean survivors and their advocates felt that Korean victims needed their own monument, especially since so many had been brought forcibly to work on foreign soil.
They were not allowed to erect a monument inside the park itself.
In April 1970, the Japanese government allowed the Korean bomb survivors to build a monument about 100 yards outside the park.
The 10-foot-high marker is made of black granite brought from South Korea.
The Koreans want their monument moved inside the park, but so far that hasn't happened.
SOUNDBITE: (Korean)
As chief of Hiroshima branch of Organization of Korean Residents, I feel very sorry that the project to move the monument into the Peace Park has not realized yet.
SUPER CAPTION: Park Eui Jong, Chief of Hiroshima branch of Organization of Korean Residents
That the monument hasn't been moved yet is at least partly due to infighting by north and south Koreans.
City officials said in 1990 that the Koreans could move their monument into the park, but only if it represents victims from both Koreas.
North Koreans in Japan say the script on the current monument contains South Korean phrasing and insist it must be changed or they want a separate monument.
And as long as the Korean parties haven't solved their dispute, the monument won't be moved into the park.
The Korean monument has been scorched three times by unknown vandals.
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Hiroshima atomic bomb: Survivor recalls horrors - BBC News
Thursday marks 70 years to the day since the United States dropped the world's first atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima. Three days later it dropped a second on the city of Nagasaki. The devastation is widely believed to have brought an abrupt end to World War Two - with Japan's surrender. But what about the appalling human cost of the bombing? Rupert Wingfield-Hayes reports from Hiroshima.
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SKorean atom bomb survivors rally in Seoul
(26 May 2016) Korean survivors of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were joined by activists at a rally in Seoul on Thursday morning.
Some 30 demonstrators called on US President Obama, who is scheduled to make a historic visit to Hiroshima on Friday, to make an apology to Korean atomic bomb victims, and to visit the monument dedicated to Korean victims at Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park.
An estimated 20,000 Koreans, many brought to Japan for slave labour during Japanese colonial rule, were killed by the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
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Koreans remember countrymen killed in Hiroshima
SHOTLIST
1. Various of women in Korean traditional dress laying lily flowers to the Korean A-Bomb victim memorial
2. Mid shot of attendees at memorial ceremony
3. Tilt down of memorial
4. Korean dancers dancing and praying
5. Korean Japanese A-bomb victim Moon-hwi Kang walking up to microphone
6. SOUNDBITE (Japanese) Moon-hwi Kang, Korean Japanese A-bomb victim:
This country, Japan, succeeded in achieving such economic prosperity without having war under the pacifist constituency for these long 60 years. And, we Korean Japanese have also managed to prosper in our own capacity. Whatever it is, there should not be a repeat of the invasion and atrocity onto the other races repeated.
7. Audience
8. Various of Korean women singing
9. Various of Korean memorial
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Jun-ho Oh, Korean team leader, Seoul-Hiroshima Peace March of Paper crane:
First (the Hiroshima tragedy is the fault of) the American government, I guess, because the American government dropped the bomb for (as an) experiment, I guess, an experiment. But secondly, the Japanese government was in charge of (is also responsible for) that tragedy because they started the war.
11. Tilt up from flower to Korean memorial
12. Japanese monks praying
13. Various of people praying in front of the national memorial, A-bombed dome
13. SOUNDBITE (English) American tourist (No name given):
Saying whether it was right or wrong, it's not a simple yes/no answer. I think you have to look at everything involved in it. World War II was a very black time in modern civilisation, the atomic bomb was terrible, but firebombing in Japan, Germany the Holocaust, many bad things happened at that time so now I think it's important for people to come to Hiroshima, to go to Auschwitz and really see mistakes that people made.
14. SOUNDBITE (English) British tourist (No name given):
It's tough to say. I mean, it did end the war, shocking as it is, it ended it extremely quickly. I suppose from an American point of view there was a lot less loss of lives from American soldiers but it's hard to see that this was so much of a military target. Same as Nagasaki. I know they said it was but I mean it's very hard to say. I'm kind of on the fence about it really.
15. Ground shot of people watching A-bombed dome
STORYLINE:
On the eve of Hiroshima's main commemoration, expected to draw more than 50-thousand people on Saturday, a small crowd of Koreans gathered in Peace Memorial Park on Friday to offer prayers and flowers to compatriots killed when the United States dropped the atomic bomb there on August 6, 1945.
Roughly 140-thousand people died within a few months of the blast.
Another 80-thousand were killed when a second bomb was dropped on Nagasaki on August 9.
Japan surrendered on August 15, 1945, bringing World War II to an end.
The tragedy of the Koreans was long ignored, and no one knows for sure how many died there.
Estimates of the death toll are based on the overall number of Koreans known to have been in Hiroshima at the time.
They made up about 10 percent of the total population, then about 350-thousand.
Because the city recognises 260-thousand bomb-related deaths over the years, Koreans believe their toll was over 20-thousand.
Japan annexed the Korean Peninsula in 1910 and forcefully brought over 300-thousand Koreans to Japan as soldiers and slave labourers.
Though the Korean victims are now eligible for medical benefits and have their own monument in peace park, many of their compatriots feel that they have yet to receive proper recognition for the suffering they were forced to endure.
The Korean gathering was one of a slew of memorials, most small and quiet, held in Peace Memorial Park on Friday.
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Japanese team to examine Korean survivors of nuclear bomb
(11 Oct 2011)
1. Plane taxiing on runway on arrival, bringing team of doctors from Hiroshima Prefectural Medical Association in Japan
2. Japanese delegation walking on tarmac
3. Various of North Korean official greeting Japanese delegation from Hiroshima Prefectural Medical Association
4. Mid shot of Japanese doctors with luggage
5. Japanese delegation exiting airport terminal with luggage
6. Various of Japanese delegation from Hiroshima Prefectural Medical Association boarding bus
7. Bus driving away
STORYLINE:
A team of six doctors from the Hiroshima Prefectural Medical Association arrived in North Korea on Tuesday to conduct medical checkups on North Koreans who were in Hiroshima at the time of the 1945 US atomic bomb attack on the city and were exposed to radiation.
The team, led by Shizuteru Usui, the 74-year-old president of the association, flew to Pyongyang via Beijing for a five-day stay in the country.
The six surgeons and interns, plus two aides, were scheduled to interview and examine the victims with the aid of local doctors in Pyongyang and Sariwon, while exchanging views with North Korean groups of atomic bomb victims.
The Japanese doctors also plan to invite members of the North Korean branch of International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW) to take part in a world conference set to take place in Hiroshima next August.
The Association interviewed such victims in 2008 during a team visit to North Korea, but doctors could not examine the victims at that time as they were not allowed by local authorities to practise medicine.
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Japan remembers the bombing of Hiroshima
Japan marked the 68th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima with a sombre ceremony to honour the dead.
Some 50,000 people stood for a minute's silence in the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park near the epicentre of the early-morning blast on 6 August 1945 that killed up to 250,000 people.
The bombing of Nagasaki three days later killed tens of thousands more, prompting Japan's surrender to the Allied powers.
Among those gathered at the peace park were some of the surviving victims of the atomic bombings.
There are more than 200,000 hibakusha, who have an average age of almost 79.
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Hiroshima Bombing Story | Tour around the Atomic Hypocenter ★ ONLY in JAPAN
Today is the 74th anniversary of the Hiroshima Bombing - August 6, 2019
Hiroshima, August 6, 1945. It’s a day that changed everything. The atomic bomb decimated the city, killing nearly all nearby the blast. Fast forward about 75 years later, and Hiroshima is now a beautiful city, resurrected from the ruins of the post war period. Near the hypocenter is the Hiroshima Memorial Peace Park and Museum and across the river, the A-Bomb Dome which sits as it did, destroyed after the bomb in ruins. We'll look at the area around the hypocenter and see old video footage from 1945 after the bomb. We'll also meet a witness who will describe in detail the horror he saw as he volunteered to help in Hiroshima on August 7, 1945, the next day.
We’re now in the 4th generation since the bomb was dropped, those that were kids who could remember are now in their 80s and 90s. Yuji is a 3rd generation Hiroshima resident since the bomb and he wants to share the city of Hiroshima so people don’t forget the past. He learned a lot from his great uncle who told him stories as a kid of the horrors of that day and how the city rebuilt. Another reason is that he wants to teach his son so he can pass on the stories from his family who were alive nearby on that tragic day. They're now tour guides in Hiroshima.
At age 92, Yuji’s great uncle shares his story of the day he will never forget. He lived in Kure city near by, saw the mushroom cloud and went into the city to help. His account is graphic, the scene is grim and real.
The city cannot erase it’s past but it can move on and write the next chapter in its history and I think that is where Hiroshima is today. Tourism to the city is increasing, many international visitors stop by Hiroshima to understand what happened on that day, pay their respects, and tours like the one with Yuji and Magical Trip I took is a way to understand just how much the city changed that day and how it’s re-invented itself since. I hope you can feel something for Hiroshima and if you are in Japan, it's a must visit destination.
★ Hiroshima Peace (Heiwa) Walking Tour can be reserved here:
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▶︎WHERE is Hiroshima and the Peace Park?
Thank you to Magical Trip for helping me with this story to connect the past with the present and get a better understanding of where Hiroshima came from and where it is gong in the future.
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ONLY in JAPAN is a registered trademark. All rights are reserved. This show has been created and produced by John Daub ジョン・ドーブ. He's been living and working in Japan for over 21 years and regularly reports on TV for Japan's International Channel.
#Hiroshima #ONLYinJAPAN
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Hiroshima Anniversary: Japan marks 70 years since atomic bombing
Bells tolled and thousands have bowed their heads in prayer in Hiroshima at ceremonies marking the 70th anniversary of the world's first atomic bombing.
At 8:15 a.m. local time the exact time the bomb exploded on August 6, 1945, a crowd stood for a moment of silence in the heavy summer heat as the Peace Bell rang.
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Tributes paid to Hiroshima victims
Japan marked the 70th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima today, as its mayor renewed calls for global leaders to rid the world of nuclear weapons, calling them the absolute evil and ultimate inhumanity...Tributes to those who perished in the bombing came in .
Hiroshima remembered in Japan - no comment
Japanese men, women and children held paper lanterns and walked around Hiroshima's Atomic Bomb Dome as the city prepared to remember victims of the nuclear bombing 70 years ago. The walk is an annual ritual organised by a local Shinto shrine to remember victims who died in the US bombing on August 6, 1945 when the city became the first civilian target of an atomic bomb attack. 140,000 people are thought to have been killed in the attack.…
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Monument to the A-bomb Victims of the Hiroshima Municipal Girls' High School (HD)
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Mayor of Nagasaki welcomes Pope's message on nuclear disarmament
(24 Nov 2019) Nagasaki Mayor Tomihisa Taue says Pope Francis’ visit and condemnation of nuclear weapons at the site of the atomic bombing that devastated the Japanese city at the end of World War II is a powerful message.
Francis arrived first in Nagasaki on Sunday to pray for the victims of the American bombing, three days after the first A-bomb hit Hiroshima, where he is also visiting later Sunday.
Francis demanded world leaders renounce atomic weapons and the Cold War-era doctrine of deterrence.
Taue says the pope delivered a message that “reminded us of the most important and basic concept to achieve a world without nuclear weapons.”
Several years ago, Francis was given a photograph of a Nagasaki boy carrying his dead baby brother on his back en route to a crematorium after the bombing.
Francis has since distributed tens of thousands of copies of the photo, with the words “The fruit of war,” printed on them.
On Sunday, a poster-sized version of the photo was displayed at the memorial, and Francis was meeting the widow and son of the American military photographer who shot it, Joe O'Donnell.
The atomic bomb attack on Nagasaki on Aug. 9, 1945, killed 74,000 people. The earlier bombing of Hiroshima killed 140,000.
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Obama, Abe agree to boost defense against N. Korean threats
미일, 北위협에 대한 억지력ㆍ방위능력 강화 합의
U.S. President Barack Obama and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe have agreed to boost defense capabilities against North Korean threats.
Obama made the remark in a press conference with Abe after the two held a summit in Ise-Shima, Japan.
The two leaders are in the Japanese city ahead of the G-7 Summit which begins there Thursday.
Once the summit ends Friday, President Obama will travel to Hiroshima.
The White House says Obama will visit the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park and attend a wreath laying ceremony.
Calls have emerged from South Korea for Obama to also visit a monument for Korean victims in the park.
White House officials say Obama will use the visit to highlight his commitment to a nuclear-free world and to honor all the innocent lives lost during the war.
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Obama calls for end of nuclear weapons In Hiroshima.
Nearly 71 years after an American bomber passed high above this Japanese city on a clear August morning for a mission that would alter history, President Obama on Friday called for an end to nuclear weapons in a solemn visit to Hiroshima to offer respects to the victims of the world’s first deployed atomic bomb.
Writing in the Hiroshima Peace Park guest book, Obama called for the courage to “spread peace and pursue a world without nuclear weapons.” In later remarks, he said that scientific strides must be matched by moral progress or mankind was doomed.
Obama’s visit, the first to Hiroshima by a sitting U.S. president, had stirred great anticipation here and across Japan among those who longed for an American leader to acknowledge the suffering of the estimated 140,000 killed during the bombing on Aug. 6, 1945, and its aftermath. That figure includes 20,000 Koreans who had been forced by the Japanese military to work in the city for the imperial war mach
Three days later in 1945, a second U.S. atomic bomb in Nagasaki killed a total of 80,000, including another 30,000 Koreans. Most of those killed in both cities were civilians. The Japanese emperor announced his nation’s surrender a week later.
Hear from survivors of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima
Play Video2:37
In interviews produced by the Japanese government, survivors talk about the experience of living through the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan)
On Friday, people lined streets as Obama’s motorcade entered the city. The presidential limousine pulled up behind the Peace Memorial Museum.
In the park, guests were seated just in front of the curved, concrete cenotaph that pays tribute to the dead with an eternal flame burning just beyond it. The Genbaku Dome, or A-bomb dome, the preserved, skeletal remnants of a municipal building destroyed in the blast, was visible in the distance.
National security adviser Susan E. Rice and Ambassador Caroline Kennedy walked out from near the museum, along with their Japanese counterparts, followed by Obama and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
Then Obama was handed a wreath and laid it on a stand in front of the cenotaph. He bowed his head and stood silently for a minute. Abe then did the same.
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[Murder in Okinawa shadows Obama talks in Japan]
“We come to ponder a terrible force unleashed in a not-so-distant past,” Obama said. The souls of the people who died in this city “speak to us,” he added. “They ask us to look inward, to take stock of who we are and what we might become.”
The president called for nations to reconsider the development of nuclear weapons and to roll back and “ultimately eliminate” them.
What the aftermath of Hiroshima looked like
View Photos The United States atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, on Aug. 6, 1945, killed 140,000 people and nearly destroyed the city.
“The world was forever changed here,” he said. “But today, the children of this city will go through their day in peace. What a precious thing that is. It is worth protecting, and then extending to every child. That is the future we can choose, a future in which Hiroshima and Nagasaki are known not for the dawn of atomic warfare but as the start of our own moral awakening.”
After the remarks, Obama and Abe walked to the front row to greet Sunao Tsuboi, a survivor of the atomic blast, who stood up clutching a walking cane. Then Obama greeted Shigeaki Mori, another survivor, giving him a hug.
The president and prime minister then walked north toward the dome. Reporters rushing to get photographs of the two got involved in an aggressive shoving match with Secret Service agents and Japanese security officials.
[For Japan’s envoy in Washington, a homecoming in Hiroshima]
Obama and Abe stood together gazing at the dome for several minutes. Abe appeared to be explaining the significance to Obama. To their left was a statue of Sadako, a child who died of radiation and became known for her colorful paper cranes, which have become a symbol of Hiroshima’s effort to promote peace.
Obama’s motorcade snaked back through the city to the helicopters waiting to ferry the president on the start of his journey home after a week-long Asian trip.
Obama’s visit was infused with symbolism for the two nations that have evolved from bitter World War II enemies into close allies.
Prior to the ceremony, Obama visited the Marine Corps Air Station in Iwakuni, about 25 miles south of Hiroshima, and spoke to a group of U.S. and Japanese troops. He told them that his trip to Hiroshima is “an opportunity to honor the memory of all who were lost during World War II.”
Obama added: “It’s a chance to reaffirm our commitment to pursu
Group Commemorates Hiroshima, Nagasaki Bombings
The Omni Center for Peace, Justice and Ecology held a ceremony Sunday to commemorate the U.S. dropping two atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, effectively ending World War II, 65 years ago.
Meeting for Peace with Pope Francis, at the Peace Memorial, Hiroshima, Japan 24 November 2019 HD
Apostolic Journey of Pope Francis to Japan.
Meeting for Peace, with Pope Francis, at the Peace Memorial, Hiroshima, Japan.
Japan: Shinzo Abe calls for nuclear-free world on Hiroshima anniversary
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe called for a “nuclear-free world” as hundreds of people gathered in Hiroshima's Peace Memorial Park, Thursday, to pay their respects to the victims of the US atomic bombing which took place exactly 70 years ago. Abe spoke at the ceremony, underlining Hiroshima’s past as proof of “the miserable reality of radiation exposure.”
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NAGASAKI JAPAN ATOMIC BOMB MUSEUM || I CAN FEEL THE PAIN
The Nagasaki Peace Park (平和公園, Heiwa Kōen) is a tranquil space that commemorates the atomic bombing of Nagasaki on August 9, 1945, which destroyed a significant portion of the city and killed tens of thousands of inhabitants. The complex is comprised of two parks and a memorial museum.
The Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum covers the history of this event in the accessible form of a story. It begins with the disastrous scene of the attack and includes the events leading up to the dropping of the atomic bomb, the reconstruction of Nagasaki up to the present day, the history of nuclear weapons development, and the hope for a peaceful world free of nuclear weapons.
Tomodachi ni Narou (let's be friends)
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US, Japan train on island where atomic-bomb runs originated
Japan took new steps toward integrating its air, sea and land forces during its most complex field exercise with the U.S. military since Tokyo passed laws expanding defense options last year.
Looking Back At Hiroshima 70 Years After the Bomb (episode 241)
Hosts Duke Oishi and Donna Blanchard recall the World War Two bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and talk about ThinkTech's trip to the Nagaoka Fireworks Display, listen to the speakers there and highlight some of the entertainment form the night. They also highlighted previous programs that discussed nuclear fission, the historical impact of the bomb and modern Japanese reactions to the bombings. Original Air Date August 23, 2015. Episode 241.