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Burn victims picture
Burn victims picture













burn victims picture

They want peace, and they want to play a part in that peace. As the only burn center in New York verified by the American Burn Association. All we know is that something’s happened to these people. Colonel Thomas Cloward, chief of American Military Government stationed there, could only say, “We don’t know what is the truly motivating force. But then, no atomic bombs have fallen on the “experts.” Like other men who have watched postwar Hiroshima, Lieut. It was easy for cynical “experts” to note the traditional Japanese love of novelty, their commercialism and their ability to be led, either for good or evil. The imponderables in the phenomenon might baffle a philosopher. The booster spirit of resurgent Hiroshima would warm the heart of any Rotarian.

burn victims picture

There is a drive on to get tourist trade and a movement to package and export bits of fused rubble to the rest of the world.

burn victims picture

Stores with Western names have opened shop. Of 60,000 houses destroyed 23,000 have been rebuilt. A population reduced from 250,000 to 175,000 in one blinding flash had slowly grown back to 210,000. He found that Hiroshima had made tremendous strides in recovery. The only civilian correspondent covering the ceremonies, LIFE’s Carl Mydans, questioned the people and took pictures. The people were putting their city back on the map. Hiroshima seemed to have risen from the dead. But then they paraded through the streets, listened to speeches and had fun. The people planted camphor tree, which is a symbol for long life, and they prayed, too. A startled world read that Hiroshima, proclaiming itself the new world mecca for peace, had held a carnival. On August 6, two years to the day and the minute after the first atomic bomb devastated their city, the people of Hiroshima, Japan, gathered to mourn but, more surprising, to celebrate as well.

BURN VICTIMS PICTURE SKIN

In the landscape of a ruined city, and on the scarred skin and misshapen limbs of Japanese who survived the world’s first nuclear attack, photographer Carl Mydans discovered the legacy part nightmare, part surprising, wishful dream of those world-changing explosions.Īs LIFE put it to the magazine’s readers in September 1947: Here, presents a selection of photographs, most of which were never published in LIFE magazine, taken in Hiroshima after the war ended. Less than a month later, American forces dropped atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, killing tens of thousands of men, women and children in an instant condemning thousands more to slow, agonizing deaths from burns and radiation sickness in the months and years to come and, in the eyes of most historians, both Western and Asian, hastening the surrender of the Japanese and bringing about the end of the Second World War. Robert Oppenheimer, famously claimed that a line from the Bhagavad Gita, a Hindu scripture, ran unbidden through his head: “Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.” The explosion was so inconceivably violent, so fearsome, that one witness to the event, the physicist J. On July 16, 1945, the Atomic Age was born when a device with an explosive “yield” roughly equal to 20 kilotons of TNT was detonated in the desert of southeastern New Mexico.















Burn victims picture