Subscribe to CAPtv

UP Coming "Event Update"

Donate to support our Mission

USD


A survivor of the 1945 Hiroshima bombing has said she is "horrified" by Donald Trump's suggestion that Japan might benefit from nuclear weapons and has urged the president to visit the site of the tragedy so he can "educate" himself. 

Keiko Ogura was an eight-year-old schoolgirl when US forces flattened Hiroshima with an atomic bomb which slaughtered hundreds of thousands and brought Japan's role in the Second World War to an abrupt end. 
Since then, she has devoted her life to telling her story to future generations so that the inhumane cruelty of nuclear weapons is never forgotten. 

Speaking to the Telegraph after a lecture at the Hiroshima Peace Museum, she spoke of her horror at discovering that America's new president had raised the idea of Japan acquiring nuclear weapons. 
"I was horrified by what he said and it made me afraid of what could be happening to Japan," said Ms Ogura, who is now 79 and the director of Hiroshima Interpreters for Peace. 
"I think he does not know the difference between conventional and nuclear weapons, and that horrified me also."
"He said, 'why not have one yourself?' As if he did not even know what happened here." "He should come to Hiroshima. He should see it, stand in front of it, and try to imagine what it is like to see the burning faces of children." Ms Ogura was referring to a controversial interview in which Mr Trump said he was in favour of Japan acquiring nuclear weapons to act as a deterrent to threats from North Korea.
"If Japan had that nuclear threat, I’m not sure that would be a bad thing for us," he said during an interview with the New York Times in March.

The president has since claimed his remarks were misinterpreted. and his current stance on nuclear weapons remains unclear.   
"It shows how important it is that everyone, including the president of the United States, is educated on what happened at Hiroshima," Ms Ogura added. 
"Since he became president we have tried to accelerate our process of educating people on what happened- we are speaking to more people, in high schools, in lectures and at the museum."
Ms Ogura escaped some of the worst effects of the atomic bomb - dubbed "Little Boy" by the Americans - as her father told her to stay at home on August 6 1945. 
"My father had a kind of inspiration. He suspected something major was about to happen because there had been so many air raid warnings," she said. 
Their home was situated in Ushita Town, which was roughly one and a half miles away from the hypocenter of the atomic bomb. 
She remembers a blinding flash of light, and a huge blast that threw her to the ground. When she returned to her house she found it all but destroyed, with thousands of shards of glass scattered through the rooms. 

Follow us on social media for more and quick update 

Comments

People Also Read

Qdot Alagbe "Apala New Skool" Trending and Spreading like Virus #CAPactofart

1 Nigeria, Atiku speaks out against anti-Igbo hate song and quit notice #CAPondaRUN

CAP on Google Map

Contact CAP

Name

Email *

Message *

Click DONATE to Help A child today if you CAN.