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I would like to say to young people in the United States and other countries: Nuclear weapons do not deter war. Nuclear weapons and human beings cannot co-exist. We all must learn the value of human life. If you do not agree with me on this, please come to Hiroshima and see for yourself the destructive power of these deadly weapons at the [[Hiroshima Peace Memorial|Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum]].}}
I would like to say to young people in the United States and other countries: Nuclear weapons do not deter war. Nuclear weapons and human beings cannot co-exist. We all must learn the value of human life. If you do not agree with me on this, please come to Hiroshima and see for yourself the destructive power of these deadly weapons at the [[Hiroshima Peace Memorial|Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum]].}}
{{As of|2009|alt=As of March 31, 2009}}, exactly 235,569 living hibakusha were certified by the Japanese government, with an average age of 75.92.<ref> {{cite web

| url= http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20090807a2.html
As of [[2006]], about 266,000 [[hibakusha]] are still living in Japan.<ref>{{cite web | title=''Asahi Shimbun'', quoted by ''San Francisco Chronicle'' | url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/gate/archive/2005/08/09/worldviews.DTL | accessdate= March 9, 2006 }}</ref>
| title= "Hiroshima sides with Obama on nukes"
| date= August 7, 2009 | work= [[The Japan Times]]
| accessdate= 2009-08-17
}}
</ref>


== See also ==
== See also ==

Revision as of 07:38, 3 December 2009

The burns on this victim look like the kimono patterns; the lighter areas of the cloth reflected the intense light from the bomb, causing less damage.

The Hiroshima Maidens are a group of twenty-five young Japanese women who were seriously disfigured as a result of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima on the morning of August 6, 1945.

Keloid scars marred their faces and many of their hands were bent into claw-like positions. These women, as well as the other citizens affected by the A-bomb were referred to as hibakusha, meaning "explosion-affected people."

The more specific nickname for the group of women – the Hiroshima Maidens – caught on when the women were brought to the United States to undergo multiple reconstructive surgeries. This highly publicized turn of events was largely the work of Saturday Review editor Norman Cousins, an outspoken advocate of nuclear disarmament.

One of these survivors, Miyoko Matsubara has said:

As a hibakusha, I am determined to continue appealing for the elimination of nuclear weapons from the Earth. That is what I must do. We survivors of the atomic bombing are against the research, development, testing, production, and use of any nuclear arms. We are opposed to war of any kind, for whatever reason. I would like to say to young people in the United States and other countries: Nuclear weapons do not deter war. Nuclear weapons and human beings cannot co-exist. We all must learn the value of human life. If you do not agree with me on this, please come to Hiroshima and see for yourself the destructive power of these deadly weapons at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum.

As of March 31, 2009, exactly 235,569 living hibakusha were certified by the Japanese government, with an average age of 75.92.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ ""Hiroshima sides with Obama on nukes"". The Japan Times. August 7, 2009. Retrieved 2009-08-17.