logo
A survivor of Nagasaki bombing struggles to preserve remains

A survivor of Nagasaki bombing struggles to preserve remains

Japan Today26-05-2025
Visitors observe the Statue of Peace at the Peace Park in Nagasaki on April 25.
By EUGENE HOSHIKO and MAYUKO ONO
Decorated with colorful paper cranes and blooming flowers, it doesn't look the scene of a tragedy.
On Aug 9, 1945, U.S. forces detonated an atomic bomb over Nagasaki. Shiroyama Elementary School was only 500 meters west of ground zero. It is thought more than 1,400 people died here, including teachers and children.
The atomic bombing of Nagasaki, and Hiroshima three days earlier, together killed more than 210,000 people. Japan surrendered on Aug 15, ending World War II and its nearly half-century of aggression across Asia.
In Nagasaki, part of the destroyed building known as the Peace Memorial Hall receives around 30,000 visitors each year. At the same time, the number of those who still remember the attack is dwindling.
Fumi Takeshita, 80, was just a child, but can still recall her experience.
'I saw an extremely strong light coming in from the window. It was white, or shall I say yellow? So strong that I couldn't keep my eyes open,' she said.
'It was the day after the bomb dropped. (My father) walked through the hypocenter, the Urakami area, and heard many people calling for help. There were heaps of bodies, too. Buildings were crashed to the ground and there was nothing left, apparently. I heard that from my grandmother. She said, 'Fumi-chan, remember the light you saw the other day? Because of that there is nothing left in Urakami, and many people died.''
She now collects items related to the bombing, many of which she has dug from the ground with bare hands. Takeshita believes it's important to preserve the physical evidence of the Nagasaki bombing, known as 'Hibaku remains.'
'Nagasaki hardly has any remains left. I have been raising my voice to be heard in order to protect them, but most of them have been taken down," she said.
Currently, 55 sites have been approved as 'Hibaku remains,' including bridges and trees, in the city's annual list. But officials say they also have to consider the city's needs and strike a balance between preservation and development.
'I have lung cancer and was told I might not be able to see the cherry blossoms this year," Takeshita said.
"But I managed to. Like myself, hibakusha (atomic bombing survivors) do not have much time left. Preserving things has a strong message. Despite all the testimonies, I believe it is more convincing and can convey, for instance, the heat which melted these objects, let alone humans.'
© Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

In Photos: Okinawa island locals accused of 'spying' for US military at end of war killed
In Photos: Okinawa island locals accused of 'spying' for US military at end of war killed

The Mainichi

time5 hours ago

  • The Mainichi

In Photos: Okinawa island locals accused of 'spying' for US military at end of war killed

Image 1 of 8 Eef Beach, where the U.S. military landed on June 26, 1945, in the final phase of World War II, is seen in the town of Kumejima, Okinawa Prefecture, in this photo taken on Aug. 4, 2025. The Japanese military's Kayama unit began to kill local residents after the U.S. military's landing, and the atrocities continued until late August that year. (Mainichi/Shinnosuke Kyan)

Japanese man recalls 500-km journey home along Korean Peninsula after WWII
Japanese man recalls 500-km journey home along Korean Peninsula after WWII

Japan Times

time10 hours ago

  • Japan Times

Japanese man recalls 500-km journey home along Korean Peninsula after WWII

Hajime Sakata, who was 8 years old just after the end of World War II 80 years ago, traveled more than 500 kilometers south across the Korean Peninsula for his return to Japan. Recalling his experience during the war, 88-year-old Sakata, who now lives in the city of Fuefuki, Yamanashi Prefecture, says, "War robs people of their emotions." Sakata was born in 1937 in what is now Kilju in northeastern North Korea. He was living with his parents and two younger sisters. The area in which Japanese people were living was surrounded by barbed wire fences. The Sakata family was living a life without any inconveniences in the area, which had such facilities as a baseball stadium, a movie theater and a shrine. However, his father was conscripted by the former Imperial Japanese Navy in 1940, and U.S. air raids began in the late stage of the war, according to Sakata. "A number of fighter jets came flying at low altitudes," Sakata said. "They machine-gunned us indiscriminately, and people died." Sakata escaped the raid by hiding in a sorghum field. On Aug. 15, 1945, Sakata heard the radio announcement of Emperor Hirohito, posthumously called Emperor Showa, of Japan's defeat in the war with his mother and sisters. The area was soon flooded with dozens of Soviet tanks. A sketch by Sakata depicts Japanese people throwing themselves off a cliff, which he and his family witnessed during their journey across the Korean Peninsula after the end of the World War II. | JIJI At night, Soviet troops targeted houses where adult men were away on military duty, and committed theft. To avoid the risk of falling prey to sexual assault, women got themselves buzzcuts and dressed like men. "I couldn't sleep because I heard gunshots every night," Sakata said. The family decided to return to Japan although they did not know the fate of the father. They left their home for Busan port, located in the south of the Korean Peninsula and more than 500 kilometers away from where they lived. They had no choice but to walk along areas where train services were unavailable due to broken railway bridges and tracks. They ate wild grass and frogs, and drank water tainted with mosquito larvae after boiling it. Sakata saw many people throwing themselves off cliffs or on the verge of death from starvation. "People had ceased to be human" under the harsh conditions, Sakata said, adding that he vividly remembers a scene in which children fought for rotten bread from a Soviet troop. After the end of the war, the Korean Peninsula was divided into two parts, with the northern part occupied by the Soviet Union and the southern part by the United States. Sakata remembers Soviet troops standing about 50 meters apart from each other around the border. Most of his belongings were seized by the troops. After crossing the border to the south, Sakata ate dry bread given by U.S. troops and kept his 2-year-old sister close with a string as they traveled. Sakata and his family arrived at Busan port about a month after their departure. At the time, Sakata looked like a skeleton because of malnutrition. "Due to the trauma of the war, I was unable to feel fear and had lost my emotions" for about 10 years after returning to Japan, Sakata said. Wars going on in many parts of the world take him back in time. "Images of battles on the news make me remember my war experience," Sakata said. "I hope to see a world without war."

Editorial: Japan gov't must quickly return remains of WWII victims to families
Editorial: Japan gov't must quickly return remains of WWII victims to families

The Mainichi

timea day ago

  • The Mainichi

Editorial: Japan gov't must quickly return remains of WWII victims to families

Sayoko Yamamoto, an 81-year-old resident of Hyogo Prefecture, has never seen her father. He was drafted to war in December 1943, six months before she was born, and reportedly died in a field hospital in Burma, present-day Myanmar, the following year. A government notice of his death in battle arrived two years after the end of World War II, but a white wooden box his family received only contained a piece of wood. Her parents' married life lasted just a little over four months, and few could share their memories and mementos of her father. As Yamamoto got older, her desire to know the truth about her dad, who passed away at age 26, grew. She examined his war records and family registry to follow in his footsteps. Yamamoto believes that if only her family had received her father's remains, they could have served as mementos to remember the deceased kin. "I miss my dad, who remains buried in a foreign land. To me, the war has not ended yet," she told the Mainichi Shimbun. During World War II, approximately 3.1 million people of Japan died. Of them, roughly 2.4 million perished overseas, or in Okinawa or Iwo Jima (now Ioto Island), but the remains of only around 1.28 million individuals are said to have been retrieved. Of the remainder, the Japanese government considers the remains of about 590,000 people as "retrievable," except for those that are sunk at sea. Retrieval becoming more difficult The work to recover the remains of the war dead began in 1952, the year Japan restored its sovereignty. From the very beginning, however, the government's stance was that "it is impossible to bring all of them back." The retrieval work has since continued, with the bereaved families protesting every time the government suggested discontinuing it. It was not until 2016 that a lawmaker-sponsored bill stipulating the retrieval as a state responsibility was passed into law. The investigation system has since been strengthened and budgets increased. However, it is becoming more difficult to discover the remains as time passes. Over the nine-year period up to fiscal 2024, the remains of fewer than 4,000 people were newly collected. According to the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare, there are approximately 3,000 locations overseas where the remains of the war dead are said to have been left but no investigation has been carried out yet. There is an urgent need to act while approaching other countries hosting those sites. The original objective of the retrieval work is to identify the remains and return them to their relatives. In recent years, an examination method of extracting DNA samples from teeth, femurs and other parts of the bodies of the war dead and comparing them with those of their kin has proven successful in determining their blood relationship. While the government had long limited this method to cases where there were personal belongings that could help identify the fallen, it relaxed the conditions in 2016 and expanded the coverage to all remains in 2021. Consequently, the remains of more than 20 people have been returned to their families from Okinawa and the southern fronts, where the personal effects of the war dead are rarely found. There are remains of more than 13,000 people from which DNA samples have been collected. The government should widely publicize information such as where those remains were recovered and whether they accompanied personal belongings, to make the data more accessible to bereaved families. It has also proven effective to approach the surviving families. In 2020, the welfare ministry sent out notices to some 2,700 relatives of those who perished on the Tarawa Atoll in Kiribati in the central Pacific as part of a pilot project to call for DNA testing. Of them, some 400 relatives came forward, leading to identifying two victims. The government is against expanding this initiative to other areas, citing excessive burdens on local bodies to be tasked with the family searches. However, in some former battlefields the scope of the families subject to the searches could be narrowed down based on the troops their kin belonged to. The government is urged to pursue effective methods and continue approaching the relatives. Witnesses to the reality of the war's devastation In Japan, there are also many victims of atomic bombings and air raids whose remains have not been found. In the aftermath of the Great Tokyo Air Raids in 1945, the bodies of victims were tentatively buried at some 150 locations according to records, but more than half of these sites have not been identified. The government must extend support to civil groups that have continued investigations throughout the country. An issue has also arisen where the remains of those who died in the 1945 Battle of Okinawa are treated carelessly. The Ministry of Defense's Okinawa Defense Bureau has cited the southern part of Okinawa's main island, where fierce battles took place during the war, as a candidate site for collecting soil for the land reclamation work off the Henoko district of Nago, Okinawa Prefecture, for the construction of a U.S. military base there. Although the governor of Okinawa and the prefectural assembly have urged that any soil containing the remains of the war dead be not used in the project, the ministry has stopped short of clarifying its stance, stating, "We haven't decided on where to procure the soil from." Photojournalist Natsuki Yasuda has compared the history of Okinawa with the realities facing people in Fukushima Prefecture who have been unable to search for the bodies of their loved ones who lost their lives to the tsunami in the wake of the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake, as the families remain evacuated from their hometowns due to the nuclear disaster. "Is it right to achieve 'recovery' based on someone else's sacrifice? I don't think a nation that disregards the deceased and their remains can protect the dignity of people alive today." The remains of the fallen are "witnesses" to history. In April this year, a group of volunteers unearthed the remains of an almost entire body in the mountains of Itoman, Okinawa Prefecture. The remains are thought to belong to a young soldier who was buried amid an intense battle. The late anthropologist Shuichiro Narasaki, a leading expert in examining human remains, wrote down that in some cases the circumstances leading up to the person's death could be conjectured based on the condition of their bones and personal effects. We must learn lessons from the realities of the war as told by the remains of the fallen, and ensure our pledges against war.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store