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BEIJING, May 8 -- August 6, 1945 - the sun rose into a clear blue sky over the city of Hiroshima, Japan promising a warm and pleasant day. Nothing in the day's dawning indicated that this day would be any different from its predecessors. But this day would be different, very different. This day would change the world. On this day a single bomb dropped
by a single airplane destroyed the city, leading to the end of World War II and
introducing mankind to the Atomic Age.
Dr. Michihiko Hachiya lived through that day and kept
a diary of his experience. He served as Director of the Hiroshima Communications
Hospital and lived near the hospital approximately a mile from the explosion's
epicenter. His diary was published in English in 1955
Suddenly, a strong flash of light...
"The hour was early; the morning still, warm, and
beautiful. Shimmering leaves, reflecting sunlight from a cloudless sky, made a
pleasant contrast with shadows in my garden as I gazed absently through
wide-flung doors opening to the south.
Clad in drawers and undershirt, I was sprawled on the
living room floor exhausted because I had just spent a sleepless night on duty
as an air warden in my hospital.
Suddenly, a strong flash of light startled me - and
then another. So well does one recall little things that I remember vividly how
a stone lantern in the garden became brilliantly lit and I debated whether this
light was caused by a magnesium flare or sparks from a passing trolley.
Garden shadows disappeared. The view where a moment
before had been so bright and sunny was now dark and hazy. Through swirling dust
I could barely discern a wooden column that had supported one comer of my house.
It was leaning crazily and the roof sagged dangerously.
Moving instinctively, I tried to escape, but rubble
and fallen timbers barred the way. By picking my way cautiously I managed to
reach the roka (an outside hallway)and stepped down into my garden. A profound
weakness overcame me, so I stopped to regain my strength. To my surprise I
discovered that I was completely naked How odd! Where were my drawers and
undershirt?
What had happened?
All over the right side of my body I was cut and
bleeding. A large splinter was protruding from a mangled wound in my thigh, and
something warm trickled into my mouth. My check was torn, I discovered as I felt
it gingerly, with the lower lip laid wide open. Embedded in my neck was a
sizable fragment of glass which I matter-of-factly dislodged, and with the
detachment of one stunned and shocked I studied it and my blood-stained hand.
Where was my wife?
Suddenly thoroughly alarmed, I began to yell for her:
'Yaeko-san! Yaeko-san! Where are you?' Blood began to spurt. Had my carotid
artery been cut? Would I bleed to death? Frightened and irrational, I called out
again 'It's a five-hundred-ton bomb! Yaeko-san, where are you? A five-
hundred-ton bomb has fallen!'
Yaeko-san, pale and frightened, her clothes torn and
blood stained, emerged from the ruins of our house holding her elbow. Seeing
her, I was reassured. My own panic assuaged, I tried to reassure her.
'We'll be all right,' I exclaimed. 'Only let's get
out of here as fast as we can.'
She nodded, and I motioned for her to follow me."
It was all a nightmare...
Dr. Hachiya and his wife make there way to the
street. As the homes around them collapse, they realize they must move on, and
begin their journey to the hospital a few hundred yards away.
After the Blast "We started out, but after twenty
or thirty steps I had to stop. My breath became short, my heart pounded, and my
legs gave way under me. An overpowering thirst seized me and I begged Yaeko-san
to find me some water. But there was no water to be found. After a little my
strength somewhat returned and we were able to go on.
I was still naked, and although I did not feel the
least bit of shame, I was disturbed to realize that modesty had deserted me. On
rounding a corner we came upon a soldier standing idly in the street. He had a
towel draped across his shoulder, and I asked if he would give it to me to cover
my nakedness. The soldier surrendered the towel quite willingly but said not a
word. A little later I lost the towel, and Yaeko-san took off her apron and tied
it around my loins.
Our progress towards the hospital was interminably
slow, until finally, my legs, stiff from drying blood, refused to carry me
farther. The strength, even the will, to go on deserted me, so I told my wife,
who was almost as badly hurt as I, to go on alone. This she objected to, but
there was no choice. She had to go ahead and try to find someone to come back
for me.
Yaeko-san looked into my face for a moment, and then,
without saying a word, turned away and began running towards the hospital. Once,
she looked back and waved and in a moment she was swallowed up in the gloom. It
was quite dark now, and with my wife gone, a feeling of dreadful loneliness
overcame me.
I must have gone out of my head lying there in the
road because the next thing I recall was discovering that the clot on my thigh
had been dislodged and blood was again spurting from the wound.
I pressed my hand to the bleeding area and after a
while the bleeding stopped and I felt better
Could I go on?
I tried. It was all a nightmare - my wounds, the
darkness, the road ahead. My movements were ever so slow; only my mind was
running at top speed.
In time I came to an open space where the houses had
been removed to make a fire lane. Through the dim light I could make out ahead
of me the hazy outlines of the Communications Bureau's big concrete building,
and beyond it the hospital. My spirits rose because I knew that now someone
would find me; and if I should die, at least my body would be found. I paused to
rest. Gradually things around me came into focus. There were the shadowy forms
of people, some of whom looked like walking ghosts. Others moved as though in
pain, like scarecrows, their arms held out from their bodies with forearms and
hands dangling. These people puzzled me until I suddenly realized that they had
been burned and were holding their arms out to prevent the painful friction of
raw surfaces rubbing together. A naked woman carrying a naked baby came into
view. I averted my gaze. Perhaps they had been in the bath. But then I saw a
naked man, and it occurred to me that, like myself, some strange thing had
deprived them of their clothes. An old woman lay near me with an expression of
suffering on her face; but she made no sound. Indeed, one thing was common to
everyone I saw - complete silence.
All who could were moving in the direction of the
hospital. I joined in the dismal parade when my strength was somewhat recovered,
and at last reached the gates of the Communications Bureau."
(Source: CRIENGLISH.com) |