logo
Photos: Search for the missing continues 80 years after Hiroshima bombing

Photos: Search for the missing continues 80 years after Hiroshima bombing

Al Jazeera2 days ago
When the first atomic bomb detonated 80 years ago on August 6, thousands of the dead and dying were brought to the small, rural island of Ninoshima, just south of Hiroshima, by military boats with crews that had trained for suicide attack missions.
Owing to inadequate medical care, only a few hundred were alive when the field hospital closed on August 25, according to historical records. They were buried in various locations in chaotic and rushed operations.
Decades later, people in the area are searching for the remains of the missing, driven by a desire to account for and honour the victims, and to bring relief to survivors who are still tormented by memories of missing loved ones.
'Until that happens, the war is not over for these people,' said Rebun Kayo, a Hiroshima University researcher who regularly visits Ninoshima to search for remains.
On a recent morning, Kayo visited a hillside plot in the forest where he has been digging for remains since 2018. He put on rubber boots and a helmet, and sprayed insect repellent.
After planting chrysanthemum flowers and praying, Kayo carefully began shovelling gravel from a hole the size of a bathtub. When the soil was soft enough, he sifted it for bone fragments.
So far, Kayo has found about 100 bone fragments, including pieces of skull and an infant's jawbone with small teeth attached. He found the bones in an area suggested by a Ninoshima resident whose father had witnessed soldiers burying bodies that were brought to the island by boat from Hiroshima 80 years ago. Tamiko Sora, right, 83, an atomic bombing survivor in Hiroshima, puts her hands together in prayer after being shown fragments of human bones found on Ninoshima Island by Rebun Kayo [Eugene Hoshiko/AP Photo]
The US atomic attack on Hiroshima instantly destroyed the city and killed tens of thousands near the hypocentre, about 10km (6 miles) north of Ninoshima. The death toll by the end of that year was 140,000.
Within two hours of the blast, victims began arriving by boat from Hiroshima at the island's Number 2 quarantine centre. Its buildings filled with patients suffering severe wounds. Many died en route to the island.
Eiko Gishi, then an 18-year-old boat trainee, oversaw carrying patients from the pier to the quarantine area for first aid. He and other soldiers cut bamboo to make cups and trays.
In recollections published by the city years later, Gishi wrote that soldiers initially handled bodies carefully, one by one, but were soon overwhelmed by the huge number of decomposing corpses and used an incinerator originally intended for military horses.
Even this was not enough, and they soon ran out of space, eventually placing bodies in bomb shelters and burial mounds.
'I was speechless from the shock when I saw the first group of patients that landed on the island,' a former army medic, Yoshitaka Kohara, wrote in 1992.
'I was used to seeing many badly wounded soldiers on battlefields, but I had never seen anyone in such a cruel and tragic state,' he said. 'It was an inferno.' The cityscape of Hiroshima as seen from Ninoshima, an island where thousands of the dead and dying were brought after the first atomic bomb detonated 80 years ago [Eugene Hoshiko/AP Photo]
Kohara remained at the facility until its closure, when only about 500 people were left alive. When he told the surviving patients that the war had ended on August 15, he recalled that they looked emotionless: 'Tears flowed from their crushed eyes, and nobody said a word.'
Kazuo Miyazaki, a Ninoshima-born historian and guide, said that towards the end of World War II, the island was used to train suicide attackers using wooden boats meant for deployment in the Philippine Sea and Okinawa.
Miyazaki, 77, lost a number of relatives in the atomic bombing. He has heard firsthand stories from relatives and neighbours about what happened on Ninoshima, which was home to a major army quarantine centre during Japan's period of militarist expansion. His mother was an army nurse who was deployed to the field hospital on the island.
The remains of about 3,000 atomic bombing victims brought to Ninoshima have been found since 1947, when many were dug out of bomb shelters.
Thousands more are thought to be missing.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Religious schools fill gaps amid Afghanistan's fractured education system
Religious schools fill gaps amid Afghanistan's fractured education system

Al Jazeera

time7 hours ago

  • Al Jazeera

Religious schools fill gaps amid Afghanistan's fractured education system

Published On 7 Aug 2025 7 Aug 2025 In Kabul's narrow alleys and quiet courtyards, boys dressed in white caps and tunics diligently recite Quranic verses across an expanding network of madrassas – religious schools that increasingly bridge critical gaps in Afghanistan's struggling education system. Public schools continue to function, but their effectiveness has diminished due to resource constraints, insufficient teaching staff and the lingering effects of decades-long conflict. Consequently, families are increasingly turning to madrassas, which provide structured education grounded in Islamic teachings. The surge in enrolment is remarkable; one school north of Kabul has expanded from 35 to more than 160 students within just five years. While most madrassas prioritise Quranic memorisation, Islamic jurisprudence, and Arabic language instruction, some have begun incorporating fundamental secular subjects such as mathematics and English. Nevertheless, many fail to meet national and international educational benchmarks, prompting concerns about their impact on students' comprehensive development. For girls, educational barriers are especially severe. With secondary education banned under Taliban rule, some girls attend madrassas as one of their few remaining pathways to learning, though opportunities remain restricted even within these institutions. Critics argue that madrassas often serve as centres for religious indoctrination, and their growing prominence may significantly influence Afghanistan's trajectory. Yet for countless children across the country, these religious schools represent their only accessible form of education.

Floating lanterns for peace on 80th anniversary of Hiroshima bombing
Floating lanterns for peace on 80th anniversary of Hiroshima bombing

Al Jazeera

timea day ago

  • Al Jazeera

Floating lanterns for peace on 80th anniversary of Hiroshima bombing

Floating lanterns for peace on 80th anniversary of Hiroshima bombing NewsFeed Hundreds of people gathered near the Atomic Bomb Dome in Hiroshima to mark 80 years since the US dropped an atomic bomb on the Japanese city. Many prayed for peace. Video Duration 01 minutes 06 seconds 01:06 Video Duration 00 minutes 30 seconds 00:30 Video Duration 01 minutes 52 seconds 01:52 Video Duration 01 minutes 40 seconds 01:40 Video Duration 00 minutes 44 seconds 00:44 Video Duration 00 minutes 43 seconds 00:43 Video Duration 01 minutes 12 seconds 01:12

Schoolboy makes Hiroshima bombing personal for Peace Park visitors
Schoolboy makes Hiroshima bombing personal for Peace Park visitors

Al Jazeera

time2 days ago

  • Al Jazeera

Schoolboy makes Hiroshima bombing personal for Peace Park visitors

Schoolboy makes Hiroshima bombing personal for Peace Park visitors NewsFeed A 12-year-old volunteer is making sure visitors to Hiroshima's Peace Park get a personal look at the tragedy of the world's first nuclear bombing, recounting his own family's experiences as passed down generation to generation. Video Duration 01 minutes 55 seconds 01:55 Video Duration 02 minutes 38 seconds 02:38 Video Duration 02 minutes 08 seconds 02:08 Video Duration 01 minutes 11 seconds 01:11 Video Duration 01 minutes 19 seconds 01:19 Video Duration 00 minutes 23 seconds 00:23 Video Duration 01 minutes 52 seconds 01:52

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