World without Nuclear Arms Wish in Hiroshima, Japan

We have been to Pearl Harbor in Honolulu, Hawaii and now we have been to Hiroshima, Japan. Both are considered bookends to the Pacific War. 


The bus pulled up to the bridge that was used by the US bomber, 'Enola Gay' to know where to drop the atomic bomb on August 6, 1945. The bridge intersected with the canal and formed a 'T'. One by one, we got off the bus. I did not even notice we were there, the A-dome building was right there in plain sight.

We couldn't even break a smile. It hit me like a ton of bricks.


The Hiroshima Prefectural Promotion Hall survived the blast because the wind blasted the building almost vertically from above.


A memorial stands in the Hiroshima Peace Park with a wreath.


Children's Peace Memorial is a monument for peace to commemorate Sadako Sasaki, the little girl that survived the blast but later died on October 25, 1955 from radiation of the atomic bomb. Shortly before she passed, she had a vision of folding 1,000 cranes. Japanese tradition says if you fold 1,000 cranes, you are granted one wish. Her wish was to have a world without nuclear weapons. 


Behind the monument are showcases housing thousands of paper cranes.

We visited the Hiroshima museum and it was a stark reminder that nuclear weapons should never be used on earth. The atrocities of war is horrific. For stories of survivors, please read:











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