Akio Nakanishi (male)
'Chokubaku' 1.1 km from the hypocenter / 18 years old at the time / current resident of Tokyo3140
'Chokubaku' 1.1 km from the hypocenter / 18 years old at the time / current resident of Tokyo3140
The
scenes of the A-bombed city are introduced here. The photographs are not
directly connected with the messages.
Q1.
What were your most unforgettable A-bomb experiences like?
A1. I was a student at Hiroshima High School under the old educational system.
The day after the bombing, I walked through downtown Hiroshima in search of my
friends. I looked for them among the floating corpses that filled the rivers.
The scenes are still indelibly printed in my eyes.
Q2.
How do you feel about the A-bomb fatalities?
A2. Utterly sad and tragic. I feel the present Japan is built on those countless sacrifices.
A2. Utterly sad and tragic. I feel the present Japan is built on those countless sacrifices.
Q3.
What do you want to tell future generations?
A3. That there is no justice to war. I want Japan to take the initiative to realize total elimination of nuclear weapons from the Earth. I wish for permanent maintenance of world peace.
(2005)
A3. That there is no justice to war. I want Japan to take the initiative to realize total elimination of nuclear weapons from the Earth. I wish for permanent maintenance of world peace.
(2005)
Even
if I write, between written words and reality there would be the difference
between heaven and earth.
In
1945, I was an eighteen-year-old second-year student in Natural Sciences,
Division B at Hiroshima High School, under the old educational system. As a
mobilized student, I engaged in rolling duralumin at a steel sheet factory
called Toyo Kohan in Kudamatsu in Yamaguchi Prefecture. I stayed in the company
dormitory together with 40 or 50 other students from Class 1 and Class 2 of
Science B.
Because
sea mines were set in the Seto Inland Sea, no ships could pass there. That
caused a coal shortage. By August 3, work had to stop at the factory. Toyo
Kohan and Nippon Oil each had a large oil tank in Kudamatsu. The Nippon Oil
site was bombed. Toyo Kohan was not bombed, but with operations on hold, the
student workers were to be sent home for a one-week leave, taking turns in two
shifts.
On
the evening of August 5, the first group, including me, took the train from
Kudamatsu. Five classmates and I were going to get off at Hiroshima Station.
Twenty or so others were going further to the Osaka area. However, in the late
afternoon of that day our train got stuck before it reached Yokogawa Station,
one stop before Hiroshima. We had to walk from there. My friends A and B
planned to stay at A's house near the Kan'on Bridge, and I was to join them
there by 8 o'clock the following morning so we could together go to the shore
and fish. My home was in Midori-machi, a few minutes on foot from Hiroshima
High School. We left the train and headed for home separately. Passing Koi
Station, I walked as far as Yokogawa, if my memory is correct, then took a
local train there.
That
night another friend C also stayed at my home. We slept in separate rooms. When
I woke up the next morning at 7 o'clock my mother told me that, unable to sleep
because of mosquitoes flying around inside the room-size mosquito net, he had
gotten up around 4 o'clock and left saying he would go back to Yokogawa while
it was still cool. C later told me, "About 7 a.m. that day, I took a bus
from Yokogawa to Hamada. As I had gotten quite a way from Yokogawa, I saw a
flash and heard a loud explosion."
On
waking that morning at seven, I went to my high school teacher D's house four
or five doors from mine, and reported to him that half the students had been
discharged for a week off, that I had led them from Kudamatsu to Yokogawa, and
that we had disbanded there.
When
I returned around 7:30 a.m., my mother and three sisters were in the dining
room talking. Suddenly an air raid alarm sounded. Almost at the same time, a
flash hit my eyes. I yelled at them, "Get outside away from the
veranda!" When they ran outside, I said again, "Hit the dirt!"
They did so silently. I remember seeing roof tiles flying through the air like
tree leaves.
When
it was calmer around us after a while, I rose to find my mother missing.
Startled, I called to her and found her underneath a glass door that had fallen
out from the veranda. We had covered the glass panes of the doors with paper to
prevent them from shattering. That kept her from getting injured. When all rose
from the ground, I wondered what this was all about. It was different from such
previous experiences as a bombing in Kudamatsu that led to a fire. Our house
was surrounded by thick concrete walls, which obstructed any view of what was
happening in town.
Besides
my mother and three sisters, there were my older sister's three or
four-month-old infant and two girls between age one and three or so. Because my
older sisters covered them, they were uninjured.
When
I returned to the rooms through the veranda, they were all empty. Everything
that was there was gone including our air raid hoods. The roofs were missing.
All of the paper sliding doors and fittings had broken off. Our padded air raid
hoods and such were perched on upper beams. Not knowing what had happened, I
decided to go to my school. I readied myself and went outside the house.
Strangely, it was too dark to see anything in the direction of downtown. As I
walked along a path through a lotus field, I met a young woman stripped to her
waist walking from the opposite direction, her breasts bleeding. "My home
is right there, so get some first aid from my family," I advised her.
The
high school wall stretched about 1,000 meters [almost 1,100 yards] along the
road. On that road I saw people coming toward me in a line. Skin peeling off,
they looked as if tattered clothes were hanging from their bodies. Their
exposed flesh was such deep red that I would have bet it had been treated with
mercurochrome. I sensed something terrible must have occurred. On reaching the
school, I found that all the buildings had been destroyed. The janitor's room
was the first one I should have caught sight of, but that and the corridor
connecting it to the main building were gone. The science lab built with
reinforced concrete remained, so I went there. Teacher E came out. At a loss to
understand the situation, we thought of going to the roof. We went up, joined
by Teacher D, but it was so pitch dark with smoke that nothing was visible. We
could detect no hole that a bomb might have made, nor did we see any fire. When
the three of us went down again, it seemed best to go home for the time being.
Teacher E was on duty that night, so he had to stay at school. Teacher D and I
wondered what could have happened and what we should do now. Eventually, however, all we could do was go
home.
My
family had a dug-out air raid shelter in our garden. With no other choice, we
sheltered there. Strangely, unlike before, we could see far out from the back
of the shelter. All the wooden fences around the house had fallen, allowing a
view from the rear of the shelter. Soldiers passing by inquired if we were
uninjured. There was an army marine unit in Ujina then. I suppose soldiers from
there were walking toward downtown Hiroshima.
Just
as teacher D and I were talking about the uselessness of staying home, a
propaganda leaflet fluttered down. It said that the same type bomb as this
would be dropped again. This is serious, we thought, and discussed where to go.
Concluding that it would be best to go to Oko Station on the Ujina line, we
headed for the station together: teacher D and his wife, their two children,
six adults and three children of my family.
At
the station, we found that nothing remained but the roof. We ate potatoes we had
brought for lunch and stayed until early evening. Ujina-line trains passed,
fully loaded with the injured and the sick from Hiroshima. They were being
transported to Ujina Station, and from there by boat to an island. Their badly
swollen arms were covered with blisters, and their clothing had been blown off.
Only scraps of trousers were left on their legs, also swollen and, with skin
falling, deep red as if coated with mercurochrome.
When
night fell, no electricity came. There was nothing around the station, and we
had brought no bedding. So we returned home to sleep. I remember that, starting
around then, one injured relative after another came to our place. All of us
had severe diarrhea that day, but when my mother suddenly remembered bottles of
beer kept in three or four tiers under the floor of our six-tatami mat living
room, we opened them and drank beer in place of water.
On
the following morning, we scratched together a meal of potato and sorghum. I
was supposed to go to Matsuo's place by 8 a.m. I wound gaiters around my lower
legs and went out with a lunch box and a canteen. As I approached the center of
town, I saw many people lying on the Miyuki Bridge. Everyone was begging for
water. This was the very same scene photographed by a newspaper reporter that
day.
I
continued to walk. Around Senda-machi, scorched dirt was piled knee-high on the
broad streetcar road. If I carelessly walked on it, my gaiters would catch
fire. To avoid that, I had to trace a narrow path allowing one person to walk
at a time. Unable to go in the direction of the Kan'on Bridge, I went to
Kamiya-cho instead, and tried to go toward the Yokogawa Bridge area, where my
older brother lived. That too proved inaccessible, and so too was the road to
Sarugaku-cho, where a cousin lived. There was no more footpath, and walking
further meant that my gaiters would catch fire.
In
Kamiya-cho, I saw a badly burned streetcar. Its wooden floor had burned. Its
driver, charred black and lying on the ground, still held the lever. All
passengers, thrown out to the tracks, had also been charred. At the entrance of
a bank, I saw a dead man still seated, burned black.
I
ended being unable to go farther than Kamiya-cho. Having achieved nothing all
day, I simply stopped by my school in the evening, talked with friends, and
went home.
The
following day, and the day after, I walked searching for familiar people. Roads
leading to A's place were impassible. Because he had planned to go fishing with
B, I assumed they had gone toward the Motoyasu River. I searched along the
river. But it was covered with corpses, the majority of which were floating
face down. I could only see them from the bridge, unable to turn them face up.
I
continued to walk daily looking for A throughout town until the war ended. A
had a younger brother, a freshman in Hiroshima High School at that time.
According to what I heard from this brother after the war, he and his father
survived. His mother was in the basement. The two of them tried to rescue her,
but the fire closed in. In the end they fled from the site. Later his injured
father was admitted to the army hospital in Ohno Village. The rain fell in
mid-September, causing a landslide that hit the hospital. His father's
whereabouts remained unknown. In the end, A's younger brother became the only
survivor in the family.
On
the morning of August 6, because I had failed to join them at 8 a.m. as
promised, A and B went out by themselves. They had just barely got on the boat,
naked but for loincloths, when they got hit. Both fell, A's younger brother
told me, and clung to the side of the boat, trying to climb back on. I assumed
that their corpses must have drifted from the river to some island in the Seto
Inland Sea. I traveled myself to many islands and searched. Corpses drifted out
to sea, and I saw a large number floating near Ujina. In the end, however, I
was unable to find either A or B.
At
that time, a relative lived on the former main street in Sarugaku-cho. His
daughter, who had joined us at our house after the bombing, was convinced that
her parents had died but wanted to identify their corpses. I accompanied her to
the house. She told me that her father was repairing a bicycle when she left
home that day, so I looked for a bicycle as we dug in the ruins. This led us to
white bones that looked like his remains. "We've found him, we've found
him," we said and brought them back to enshrine at home.
Her
mother was with us too, but she happened to be out helping with house
evacuation work. Nobody knew which site she had been assigned to. Assuming she
must have been on an island on the Seto Inland Sea, the daughter and I walked
around on Ninoshima and other islands. According to what I later heard, she
learned that her mother had died at a hospital in Kure Town near Hiroshima.
About a year later, she and her sister dug the ground there. What guided them
in locating their mother was memory of the pattern on the kimono she had worn.
At
our house, the roof tiles were blown off and the roof itself was crushed.
Pillars were all that remained on the second floor, other fixtures shattered
and blown away. Still, because the tatami mats held, relatives with nowhere
else to go gradually collected.
On
August 15, I heard the radio announcement on the termination of war.
I
thought the remaining half of the students still at Kudamatsu wouldn't be able
to go home unless someone took their place. I decided to replace them and got
on a train around Koi. I went as far as Ohno, where the train stopped. Iwakuni
was bombed the day before, I was told, stopping transportation. So I started
walking, with my lunch box and a Japanese sword wrapped in a bag. When I left
home, my mother had advised me to bring the weapon as a cautionary measure
because one never knew what might happen in this situation. There I ran into a military
officer attached to my school. "I'm on my way to Kudamatsu," I told
him. "I'm also headed for Kudamatsu," he said, "so let's walk
together." He and I walked from Ohno to Iwakuni, and farther. On our way,
we saw holes made by bombs here and there, as well as dead horses with badly
swollen bellies. We finally got on a train at the station one stop after
Iwakuni and reached Kudamatsu.
Once
there, we said to the students who were still there: "The mobilized groups
are about to disband. So why don't you all go home." Around that time, 20
or 30 Koreans our age were there for labor mobilization. I remember saying to
them as we parted, "Now that the war is over, you can return to Korea.
Let's meet again someday."
Of
my classmates G and H who went back to Hiroshima, the latter lived near us. His
father, a Hiroshima University of Science and Literature professor, was hit by
the explosion and died near Senda-machi. He suffered minor burns and took a
year off from school. Both H and G are still well.
This
is about my older brother, who lived by the river in Yokogawa. Drafted as an
army lieutenant, he was stationed in the Western Headquarters. On August 6, he
happened to be home. Just as he rose after breakfast holding his little son in
his arms, the bomb exploded. Past noon that day, black rain fell and it got
pitch dark. As flames gradually closed in, he went down the stone steps by the
house leading to the river, his son in his arms. He waded into the water for
safety and held onto a boat, or perhaps a raft. After a while, saying his
stomach hurt, he lay down on the steps and passed away just like that. Perhaps
his intestines had burst or there was bleeding in the liver. His wife had
shards of glass inside her entire body. Despite the fact that they were not
removed, she remained healthy until she died around 1985. Their son remains
healthy.
One
of my cousins who stayed at our place died of radiation disease. In those days
families were unable to take care of the dead at home. There was an embankment
facing Oko Station some distance away from Midori-machi in the direction of
Ujina. Because there were no houses around the embankment, that was where
bodies were brought and cremated. What we all did was pile wood, place a body,
start a fire, burn the body, and collect the ashes the following day. In the
evenings, the stench of corpses wafted toward houses in Midori Town.
Whether
an air raid warning went off or B-29s roared, even as we shook one another from
sleep and everyone woke instantly, we just sat on our bedding, saying it was no
longer any use running.
The
following is after the war ended. An older brother-in-law who was an army major
flew from Tokyo on hearing that Hiroshima was totaled. He had intended to pick
up our bones, so he was surprised to find us alive. My other older
brother-in-law, who had been drafted into the navy, belonged to its flying
corps in Takuma, Kagawa Prefecture in Shikoku. He traveled by seaplane from
Takuma to Ujina carrying a number of funerary boxes with the same intention. He
too was surprised to find us alive. At the army and navy, they had been told
that no one in Hiroshima had survived .
In
early September, we learned that the U.S. Army was entering Hiroshima. I was
alarmed as the only male in the family, having to care for my mother, older
sisters, and others. Because the roads were drivable by then, we borrowed a
truck from a neighbor and took shelter in Tokoroyama, far from downtown
Hiroshima. It was a rural area in the mountains with just five or six
households, about one hour on foot from a town called Tsuda. For some time, we
went back and forth between that place and our home in Midori-machi.
(After
the A-bombing, could you obtain food?)
Around the time of the bombing, we tried this way and that to obtain food. Tokoroyama being a rural area, everyone was kind enough to share food with us.
Around the time of the bombing, we tried this way and that to obtain food. Tokoroyama being a rural area, everyone was kind enough to share food with us.
(What
did your father do for a living?)
He was a lumber dealer. He died in January 1945.
He was a lumber dealer. He died in January 1945.
(When
did you find out that it was an A-bomb?)
My brother-in-law working in the Army told me. It may have been before the end of the war.
My brother-in-law working in the Army told me. It may have been before the end of the war.
(What
aftereffects did you have?)
I just had loose bowels. That goes for everyone in my family.
I just had loose bowels. That goes for everyone in my family.
(When
did you move from Hiroshima to Tokyo?)
In 1947, because I was accepted into the University of Tokyo's Department of Medicine.
In 1947, because I was accepted into the University of Tokyo's Department of Medicine.
(Have
you ever written about what you have spoken now?)
I haven't. Even if I write, between written words and the reality there would be the difference between heaven and earth. I have never written anything, thinking it would be of no use to write.
I haven't. Even if I write, between written words and the reality there would be the difference between heaven and earth. I have never written anything, thinking it would be of no use to write.
(On
August 16, 2002, dictated to my wife.)
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