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Essay about Hiroshima
The history of destruction dates back as far as mankind has existed. The constant wars, battles, and death have left an imprint that will forever be
engrained into our past. When disastrous events occur, our world begins to change in some way. We often read about the great destruction of World
War I, but it's very difficult to know thetrue feelings and opinions of what was happening during that time. This is one small example in the history of
destruction. World War II followed suit when it turned out to be a prime example of human nature reaching the greatest heights of destruction. World
War II was ending and the Japanese unexpectingly attacked the U.S. at Pearl Harbor. The U.S. would in turn bomb Hiroshima and Nagasaki. After the
...show more content...
Whether the use of this particular weapon to be used was justified or not, the world will never know, but for me it was the proper attack. Dr. Leo
Szilard, 62, is a Hungarian–born physicist who helped persuade President Roosevelt to launch the A–bomb project and who had a major share in it. In
later years, Truman was elected President and he had to make the decision on whether or not to launch the bombs on Japan. Dr .Leo was totally
against the use of the bombs on the Japanese and thought that the President was making a wrong choice. When reporters asked Dr. Leo if
President Truman really though the whole process through, he states, I don't think Japan would have surrendered unconditionally without the use
of force. He is saying that there was a need to use force in order for the Japanese to surrender. There is some evidence saying that Japanese were
waiting for any chance to surrender to the U.S but there is no actual proof. Dr. Leo is a physicist not a world leader, he does not know all the things
that a President of the U.S. would know. A decision of that kind could not be chosen by a scientist, they are only involved in making a product. They
know what the product does inside and out but on a worldly issue they are pretty blinded to the real facts. The opinions of our scientific colleagues on
the initial use of these weapons are not unanimous: they range from a purely technical demonstration to that of the military application
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Essay on The Hiroshima Bombing
The Hiroshima Bombing Fifty four years ago, the detonation of the first atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima (and later on Nagasaki)
ushered to the Nuclear Age. It was a moment full of horror, in which the eyes of the whole world were opened to the unimaginable possibility of
nuclear holocaust. The experience on what happened to those cities and what is still happening to many of the survivors there, leads to explore what
happened to America as a consequence of Hiroshima; both the bomb's existence in the world, and the United States having used it. The dropping of the
bomb was born out a complex abundance of military, domestic and diplomatic pressures and concerns. The popular tradition view that dominated the
1950s...show more content...
The attack on Pearl Harbor four years earlier was one of the justifications President Truman gave for his decision. Over 240,000 Japanese civilians
died––the attack on Pearl Harbor was returned 100 times over. At 2:45 A.M. local time, August 6, 1945, a B
–29 bomber named Enola Gay left the
Pacific island of Tinian on a bombing mission. The target: Hiroshima. At 8:15 A.M. Japan time, the first atomic bomb dropped in history "The Little
Boy" (made of uranium) exploded a minute later after being released, at approximately 580 meters above the center of Hiroshima. The temperature
of the air at the point of explosion reached several million degrees Celsius. At the moment of explosion, intense heat rays and radiation were released
in all directions, and a blast erupted with incredible pressure on the surrounding air. As the unimaginable blast subsided after the blowing from the
hypocenter toward the outlying areas, a vacuum of air and pressure was generated in the center. The wind reversed direction and began blowing
towards the center from the outlying areas with the intensity of another blast. The shock wave traveling directly from the center of the explosion and
the shock waves reflected from the ground and buildings affected each other, creating a variety of significant damage on the ground. After ten seconds,
the shock wave had traveled approximately 3.7 km from
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Hiroshima, By John Hersey
Hersey, John. Hiroshima. New York: n.p., 1946. Print. Before John Hersey's novel, Hiroshima, Americans viewed Japanese as cruel and heartless
people. This warped perspective caused the majority of American citizens to feel complacent about the use of the atomic bomb against civilians.
Americans, in many ways, were blinded by their own ignorance to notice the severity of the destruction suffered by not only the city of Hiroshima but,
more importantly, the people who lived there. The six testimonies in Hiroshima illustrate the strength and optimistic attitude of the Japanese people. In
this essay, I will discuss the feelings towards the ethics surrounding the use of the atomic bomb, next I will look at two testimonies and how their lives
...show more content...
Total war is the idea that there are no restrictions on weapons used, territory or people involved, and the laws of war are generally disregarded. In total
war, "there [is] no difference between civilian and soldiers" (118). Many people believed that since, "It was war and we had to expect it" (117) and by
it they meant the worst.
Hiroshima covers the lives of six survivors of the atomic bomb in detail but right now we are going to focus on how Mrs. Nakamura and Mr.
Tanimoto initially reacted to the bomb and how their lives were effected afterwards. Mrs. Nakamura is a widow and a mother of three children.
Her and her family are left homeless and jobless after the bomb destroyed her house. While neither her nor her children suffer any immediate harm
following the bomb, both Mrs. Nakamura and her daughter, Myeko, contract radiation poising later on as a side effect of prolonged exposure to
large amounts of radiation. Mrs. Nakamura will suffer from radiation poison which will take away her ability to work. With no work or money, her
and her family will fall into extreme poverty. Eventually, Mrs. Nakamura is employed and becomes finically stable. While it was no easy task, she,
like many other Japanese citizens, started a new life for themselves and families. Mr. Tanimoto underwent the most drastic lifestyle change from before
the bomb went off to his life afterwards by far. Mr. Tanimoto is a Methodist pastor and initially
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Hiroshima Essay examples
Hiroshima The stories and events that unfold in John Hersey's, Hiroshima, have certainly been eye–openers for me. As a child in middle school and
high school I, we have all heard of the atomic bomb and of course of Hiroshima, but never in as much detail or on such a personal level as these
stories. Not even in chemistry or physics class, where I learned some of the specifics as to how the bomb works, had I known of the destructive force
of the bomb or it's gruesome effects on human beings. As I mentioned before, this book was quite an eye–opener for me because it has taught me just
how deadly nuclear weapons can be not only on material properties, but on human beings, and why nuclear weapons must never again be used is such
a way....show more content...
The first story of the book we hear is that of the Reverend Tanimoto. He is dropping off some goods at a friend's house for safekeeping some 3,500
yards, or two miles, away from the center of the explosion and that house crumbles to the ground from the force of the blast. That seems so amazing
to me because in such a huge city, most of the time, you cannot even see two miles away. It may be difficult for most people to appreciate the force of
a bomb that can destroy something two miles away, but most airplane bombs only destroy things within about 100 yards. That would be everything
within a football field completely wiped out, now imagine something that could level everything within 35 football fields!
The book also accounts just how much pressure the bomb exerted and how hot the bomb blast was according to scientists of the time. These were two
other awesome statistics. The pressure of the blast was estimated to be somewhere between 5.3 to 8 tons per square yard. A yard is slightly larger than a
person's arm and most people cannot lift more than a hundred pounds on one arm. Imagine having over 10,000 pounds, or five tons, of pressure being
exerted on your arms? It's almost unbelievable. The heat given off by the blast is just as astonishing a number as the pressure. There was evidence that
clay tiles, whose melting point is thirteen times hotter than that of the boiling point of water, had
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Essay on Hiroshima, by John Hersey
While looking for a boat to carry the severely injured across the river, Mr Tanimoto "... Found a good–sized pleasure punt drawn up on the bank... five
dead men, nearly naked, badly burned..." (Hersey, 37) near it, he "... lifted the men away from the boat... he experienced such horror at disturbing the
dead..." (Hersey, 37). On August 6, 1945 the United States dropped an atomic bomb on the cities ofHiroshima and Nagasaki, to end the war between
them. Hiroshima, by John Hersey is a book about six survivors of the first atomic bomb ever dropped on a city. The six survivors tell their stories of
where they were before the bomb was dropped, what they did after the bomb was dropped, and what their life was like years after the bomb. The book
also...show more content...
Not wanting to let go of her expired infant Mrs. Kamai was devastated by the loss of her daughter. Two girls lost their family and Mrs. Kamai lost her
baby, due to the bomb children lost their parents and parents lost their infants.
After the bomb was dropped many people had developed serious health issues, many not knowing they had any. Father Wilhelm Kleinsorge, a German
priest, had to have repeated visits to the hospital, to be treated for medical symptoms commonly found in the A–bomb survivors. "Back in the hospital
in Tokyo for the second time, Father Kleinsorge was suffering from fever, diarrhea, wounds that would not heal, wildly fluctuating blood counts, and
utter exhaustion. For the rest of his life, he was to be a classic case history of... borderline form of A–bomb sickness... many of which turned up in
hibakusha..." (Hersey, 110). A few years after the atom bomb was dropped many survivors, commonly called hibakusha, meaning explosion
–affected
persons, had to make many trips to the hospital because the United States dropped the atom bomb. Dr. Fujii, a physician who has a private hospital,
planned to have a gathering on New Year's Day with his family, but never showed up. "At half past eleven, Dr. Fujii had not appeared, and
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Hiroshima, By John Hersey
On August 6, 1945, Hiroshima was unfortunate to be the first city of an atomic attack by the United States. Thousands of people were not so lucky to
survive and tell their story of the aftermath of the Hiroshima bombing. In the book Hiroshima, by John Hersey, he writes about the tragic experience of
six lucky survivors, on the day of the bombing in Hiroshima. Hersey wrote Hiroshima to give an insight about the experience of pain, hopelessness,
and difficult time for many people of what used to be a nice city.
The book started off by telling the time, date, and what the six people were doing right before the bomb went off in Hiroshima. Many civilians in
Hiroshima thought that someday they would be attacked by the United States, but no one...show more content...
He would eventually find his family after running back and forth to find out if they were safe then he got emotional. Father Kleinsorge was left with
minor injuries, but a girl ran to him asking for his help saying her mother and sister were buried under their home. These two encouraging men went
out of their way to help many people, from family to people they never knew existed. Dr. Sasaki is another lucky one with minimum harm. This young
doctor that did not have his license yet, ministered to people. In this crisis, he would not need his license to help thousands of people with their injuries.
The other three survivors were not so lucky. They had more than minimum injuries. Dr. Fujii was on a porch in his underwear. After the shock
wave hit, the building he was in fell over into the river. Here Dr. Fujii was stuck in the river with two heavy timbers on his chest. He forced his
way out, before he drowned in the river. As for Mrs. Nakamura, she was in her kitchen when she saw the bright white light and the shock wave that
brought her house down on her and her three children. With all of her motherly strength she freed herself first and then rescued her three children.
Miss Sasaki could not see the bright white light from the office she was in. Instead she was hit by surprise and was filled with fear not knowing
what was going on. She was then buried for hours by a bookcase that broke her leg, the floor above her, and the roof.
Doctors had no clue
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Essay on John Hersey's Hiroshima
John Hersey's Hiroshima
In John Hersey's Hiroshima, he based his book upon the one perspective that, the bombing of Hiroshima was an act of inhumanity. What Hersey
failed to do was to give the perspective of the Americans. Hersey did not account for the Pearl Harbor bombing of 1941 or the death march in the
Japanese Bataan Camps in 1942. Without giving both perspectives, Hersey does not give the reader a fair chance to form their own opinion; instead,
the reader is swayed into Hersey's bias beliefs of the event. Hersey's Hiroshima was originally an article written for The New YorkerMagazine in order
to help a "reader identity with deceased and survivors of the Hiroshima's bombing" (The New Yorker). He accomplished this by...show more content...
One scientist from the Manhattan Project, the creators of the atomic bomb, in response to Hersey's article in the New Yorker wrote, "I am filled
with such shame to recall the whoopee spirit, at the announcement of bombing Hiroshima" (The New Yorker). This type of reaction, after reading
Hersey's vivid work on the Hiroshima bombing, is understandable and expected. What Hersey failed to do was to give the other perspective, of
why America took these actions against Hiroshima? The two major historic events that Hersey failed to mention were the bombing of Pearl Harbor
and the death march at the Bataan Camps. These two instances show the attacks that Japan made against America. December 7, 1941, Japan
performed a surprise attack on America at Pearl Harbor. "According to Japanese feudal code of honor, the idea of a surprise is recommended and it
raises no moral problems" (Sulzberger 146). During Japan's attack, they broke the seal of trust. "Japan's Ambassador and Diplomatic agent were in
Washington pretending to have been seeking a negotiated settlement between the two countries" (Sulzberger 146). America lost over 3,000 service
men from this bombing. This type of betrayal could only cause anger and determination to strike back. The death march at the Japanese Bataan Camp,
of April 1942, Japanese officers enslaved about "75,000 men, 12,000 of which were American soldiers" (Bergamini 1168). "The soldiers were forced to
march sixty miles with
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Hiroshima Health Issues Essay
During the bombing of Hiroshima, casualty rates among medical personnel were in the range between 80 to 93 percent. Injuries resulting from the
bombing often went untreated, and the survivors did not receive health care for some time. The book Hiroshima discusses this issue in great length,
specifically why they were not given the necessary aid. The government of Hiroshima played a major role in this.
In the novel Hiroshima, the human rights issue of health care affected multiple countries by inducing the development of Universal Declaration of
Human Rights.
The bombing of Hiroshima clearly created the human rights issue of lack of health care in Japan. "Of the city's 298 medical doctors, 270 (90%)
became A–bomb victims. Casualty rates among pharmacists, nurses, and other medical professionals ranged between 80% and 93%. Eighteen
emergency hospitals and 32 first–aid clinics were destroyed, and most of the workers needed to restore these health facilities were killed or injured.
Nearby army medical facilities were also mostly destroyed." (Atomic Bomb Museum)The text informs the readers of the high death rates. These deaths
were of a variety of people, immigrants, tourists, and Japanese people. Not only are the deaths greater...show more content...
"Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well–being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, and
housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age
or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control" (United Nations Declaration of Human Rights).The United Nations Declaration of
Human Rights immediately brought about a change to the world as a whole. Not only did they decide it inhuman to keep health care from citizens, but
they set out other standards of
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John Hersey's Hiroshima Essay
John Hersey's Hiroshima
John Hersey's Hiroshima is a factual account about the day the United States government dropped the first atom bomb on the city of Hiroshima,
Japan. John interviewed six survivors and reported their stories in a factual but interesting fashion. He gives a brief description of each person and
tells of his or her daily activities both before and after the explosion. Hersey's descriptions of people and events give the reader a feeling of actually
being at the scene. He intensifies each character's need to survive. The sense of survival is deeply rooted in the hearts of most people.
One of the survivors ("hibakusha" as they were known), Mrs. Hatsuyo Nakamura, is described as "...a tailor's widow,...show more content...
Mrs. Nakamura's sense of survival saved her life and the lives of her three children. Even though her rationality was blurred at times, such as getting
overcoats for the children in the middle of summer and throwing her sewing machine into the water tank, her desire to survive pushed her beyond her
limits.
In comparison, the "Testimony of Toshiko Saeki" tells of a young woman's struggle to find her family after the bomb was dropped. The woman's name
is
Toshiko Saeki who, at the time of the bombing, was with her children at her parents' home which was far away from Hiroshima. She saw a flash of
light then felt heat surrounding her body. She then heard a loud noise and saw windows and doors being blown away into the air. When she
realized what had happened her first instinct was to go to Hiroshima to find the rest of her family. On her way she saw a naked man holding a
piece of iron over his head. She was embarrassed and turned her back on him. "The man was passing by me, thn, I don't know why, But I ran after
him and I asked him to stop for a moment. I asked him, "Which part of Hiroshima was attacked?" Then the man put down the piece of iron and he
started at me. He said, "You're Toshiko, aren't you?" He said, "Toshiko!""(Saeki 1). Toshiko couldn't tell who he was until he said, "It's me! It's me,
Toshiko! You can't tell?"(Saeki 1).
She then realized it was one of her brothers, the second eldest. Toshiko searched for her
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Expository Essay On Hiroshima
Hiroshima Expository Essay In Hiroshima, Japan on August 6th, 1945 the lives of 6 survivors changed. But it changed for the best for some of
those people. In the book Hiroshima by John Hersey, we need to understand how to think about something before doing it, and it's better to think
about our past and how that changes the way of life. In life the best thing to do is to think before you say/do something bad. When America dropped
the Atom bomb "Of the 1,780 nurses alive and well 1,654 were badly hurt/dead after the bomb." (Hersey 24). The Americans weren't thinking about
the lives that would be lost due to their careless act. The bomb's radiation would later kill 100,000 people within the next year. The example of the
1,780 nurses being
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Hiroshima (The Book) Essay
Title: Hiroshima
Type of book: Non–Fiction
Summary: The book, Hiroshima, is the story of six individuals who experienced the true effects of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, August 6,
1945. Miss Toshinki Sasaki, a clerk in the East Asia Tin Works factory, just sat down in the plant office and was turning to converse with the girl at the
next desk when the bomb exploded. Dr. Masakazu Fujii, a physician, was relaxing on his porch, which overlooked the Kyo River, where he was
reading the morning periodical when the shell detonated. Before the eruption, Mrs. Hatsuyo Nakamura was observing her neighbor destruct his house
as part of a fire lane in preparation of an American attack. Previous to the attack, Father...show more content...
By nightfall of that day, 10,000 victims had invaded the Red Cross hospital and Dr. Sasaki was totally worn out. He had lost his glasses in the
explosion and had taken a pair from a wounded nurse. Although these were not his prescription, he could see well enough to do some bandaging.
He tried to bandage the ones that he thought had a chance of survival. He felt that he could not afford to spend time on those that he was sure
would die despite his efforts. Miss Sasaki spent two days and nights under the rubble with her leg crushed. Her leg became swollen and discolored.
All this time, she was without food or water. On the third day, some of her friends who thought that she was dead came to look for her body but
found her instead. Her friends informed her that the rest of her family had surely perished at the Tamura Pediatric Hospital, where her young baby
brother had been a patient. Later, some men carried her to a truck to a relief station in Inokuchi and two Army doctors examined her. From there, she
was placed on a launch to the nearby island of Ninoshima. This began her long period of hospitalization to recover from her serious leg wound. About
12 – 14 days after the explosion, Father Kleinsorge, Mrs. Nakamura and Mr. Tanimoto fell ill with general malaise, weakness, tiredness, and fever.
They did not know it but they were coming down with a disease that was later to be called radiation sickness. Miss Sasaki lay in
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Essay on Hiroshima by John Hersey
Hiroshima by John Hersey
The non–fiction book Hiroshima by John Hersey is an engaging text with a powerful message in it. The book is a biographical text about lives of six
people Miss Sasaki, Dr. Fujii, Mrs. Nakamura, Father Kleinsorge, Dr. Sasaki and Rev. Tanimoto in Hiroshima, Japan and how their lives completely
changed at 8:15 on the 6th of August 1945 by the dropping of the first atomic bomb. The author, John Hersey, through his use of descriptive language
the in book Hiroshima exposes the many horrors of a nuclear attack.
Through the shocking and troubling graphic detail of human suffering and the physical effect of radiation and burns caused by the dropping of the
atomic bomb Hersey exposes to the reader the deeply...show more content...
In the book Hiroshima the author not only exposes the physical impacts right after the bomb but also weeks and years after the nuclear attack. The
effect of radiation caused by the atomic bomb on people for most lasted for the rest of there live and often was the cause of the death and for those
who had children affected some of there children. One of the six people interviewed, Father Kleinsorge who had only suffered minor cuts when the
bomb had been dropped, a month later they still hadn't healed and was suffering from high fever and abdominal pain and low white cell count. But
his character couldn't receive the one thing which would have probably helped, a blood transfusion because with atomic bomb patients they weren't
sure that if you stick needles in them they'll stop bleeding. By telling the reader about Father Kleinsorge Hersey shows the reader that the nuclear
attack caused many people to suffer from radiation sick months after the actual bombing and the irony is that one of thing that could save them could
also kill them. The author also tells us that by 1950 the incidence of leukemia in hibakusha (survivors of the atomic bomb) was between ten and
fifteen time above the normal, this was five years after the bomb had hit Hiroshima. Hersey does this to show the reader that even for those that are
lucky enough to escape death and the terrible burns from the bomb they still are affected physically by the effect of
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Essay About Hiroshima

  • 1. Essay about Hiroshima The history of destruction dates back as far as mankind has existed. The constant wars, battles, and death have left an imprint that will forever be engrained into our past. When disastrous events occur, our world begins to change in some way. We often read about the great destruction of World War I, but it's very difficult to know thetrue feelings and opinions of what was happening during that time. This is one small example in the history of destruction. World War II followed suit when it turned out to be a prime example of human nature reaching the greatest heights of destruction. World War II was ending and the Japanese unexpectingly attacked the U.S. at Pearl Harbor. The U.S. would in turn bomb Hiroshima and Nagasaki. After the ...show more content... Whether the use of this particular weapon to be used was justified or not, the world will never know, but for me it was the proper attack. Dr. Leo Szilard, 62, is a Hungarian–born physicist who helped persuade President Roosevelt to launch the A–bomb project and who had a major share in it. In later years, Truman was elected President and he had to make the decision on whether or not to launch the bombs on Japan. Dr .Leo was totally against the use of the bombs on the Japanese and thought that the President was making a wrong choice. When reporters asked Dr. Leo if President Truman really though the whole process through, he states, I don't think Japan would have surrendered unconditionally without the use of force. He is saying that there was a need to use force in order for the Japanese to surrender. There is some evidence saying that Japanese were waiting for any chance to surrender to the U.S but there is no actual proof. Dr. Leo is a physicist not a world leader, he does not know all the things that a President of the U.S. would know. A decision of that kind could not be chosen by a scientist, they are only involved in making a product. They know what the product does inside and out but on a worldly issue they are pretty blinded to the real facts. The opinions of our scientific colleagues on the initial use of these weapons are not unanimous: they range from a purely technical demonstration to that of the military application Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 2. Essay on The Hiroshima Bombing The Hiroshima Bombing Fifty four years ago, the detonation of the first atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima (and later on Nagasaki) ushered to the Nuclear Age. It was a moment full of horror, in which the eyes of the whole world were opened to the unimaginable possibility of nuclear holocaust. The experience on what happened to those cities and what is still happening to many of the survivors there, leads to explore what happened to America as a consequence of Hiroshima; both the bomb's existence in the world, and the United States having used it. The dropping of the bomb was born out a complex abundance of military, domestic and diplomatic pressures and concerns. The popular tradition view that dominated the 1950s...show more content... The attack on Pearl Harbor four years earlier was one of the justifications President Truman gave for his decision. Over 240,000 Japanese civilians died––the attack on Pearl Harbor was returned 100 times over. At 2:45 A.M. local time, August 6, 1945, a B –29 bomber named Enola Gay left the Pacific island of Tinian on a bombing mission. The target: Hiroshima. At 8:15 A.M. Japan time, the first atomic bomb dropped in history "The Little Boy" (made of uranium) exploded a minute later after being released, at approximately 580 meters above the center of Hiroshima. The temperature of the air at the point of explosion reached several million degrees Celsius. At the moment of explosion, intense heat rays and radiation were released in all directions, and a blast erupted with incredible pressure on the surrounding air. As the unimaginable blast subsided after the blowing from the hypocenter toward the outlying areas, a vacuum of air and pressure was generated in the center. The wind reversed direction and began blowing towards the center from the outlying areas with the intensity of another blast. The shock wave traveling directly from the center of the explosion and the shock waves reflected from the ground and buildings affected each other, creating a variety of significant damage on the ground. After ten seconds, the shock wave had traveled approximately 3.7 km from Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 3. Hiroshima, By John Hersey Hersey, John. Hiroshima. New York: n.p., 1946. Print. Before John Hersey's novel, Hiroshima, Americans viewed Japanese as cruel and heartless people. This warped perspective caused the majority of American citizens to feel complacent about the use of the atomic bomb against civilians. Americans, in many ways, were blinded by their own ignorance to notice the severity of the destruction suffered by not only the city of Hiroshima but, more importantly, the people who lived there. The six testimonies in Hiroshima illustrate the strength and optimistic attitude of the Japanese people. In this essay, I will discuss the feelings towards the ethics surrounding the use of the atomic bomb, next I will look at two testimonies and how their lives ...show more content... Total war is the idea that there are no restrictions on weapons used, territory or people involved, and the laws of war are generally disregarded. In total war, "there [is] no difference between civilian and soldiers" (118). Many people believed that since, "It was war and we had to expect it" (117) and by it they meant the worst. Hiroshima covers the lives of six survivors of the atomic bomb in detail but right now we are going to focus on how Mrs. Nakamura and Mr. Tanimoto initially reacted to the bomb and how their lives were effected afterwards. Mrs. Nakamura is a widow and a mother of three children. Her and her family are left homeless and jobless after the bomb destroyed her house. While neither her nor her children suffer any immediate harm following the bomb, both Mrs. Nakamura and her daughter, Myeko, contract radiation poising later on as a side effect of prolonged exposure to large amounts of radiation. Mrs. Nakamura will suffer from radiation poison which will take away her ability to work. With no work or money, her and her family will fall into extreme poverty. Eventually, Mrs. Nakamura is employed and becomes finically stable. While it was no easy task, she, like many other Japanese citizens, started a new life for themselves and families. Mr. Tanimoto underwent the most drastic lifestyle change from before the bomb went off to his life afterwards by far. Mr. Tanimoto is a Methodist pastor and initially Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 4. Hiroshima Essay examples Hiroshima The stories and events that unfold in John Hersey's, Hiroshima, have certainly been eye–openers for me. As a child in middle school and high school I, we have all heard of the atomic bomb and of course of Hiroshima, but never in as much detail or on such a personal level as these stories. Not even in chemistry or physics class, where I learned some of the specifics as to how the bomb works, had I known of the destructive force of the bomb or it's gruesome effects on human beings. As I mentioned before, this book was quite an eye–opener for me because it has taught me just how deadly nuclear weapons can be not only on material properties, but on human beings, and why nuclear weapons must never again be used is such a way....show more content... The first story of the book we hear is that of the Reverend Tanimoto. He is dropping off some goods at a friend's house for safekeeping some 3,500 yards, or two miles, away from the center of the explosion and that house crumbles to the ground from the force of the blast. That seems so amazing to me because in such a huge city, most of the time, you cannot even see two miles away. It may be difficult for most people to appreciate the force of a bomb that can destroy something two miles away, but most airplane bombs only destroy things within about 100 yards. That would be everything within a football field completely wiped out, now imagine something that could level everything within 35 football fields! The book also accounts just how much pressure the bomb exerted and how hot the bomb blast was according to scientists of the time. These were two other awesome statistics. The pressure of the blast was estimated to be somewhere between 5.3 to 8 tons per square yard. A yard is slightly larger than a person's arm and most people cannot lift more than a hundred pounds on one arm. Imagine having over 10,000 pounds, or five tons, of pressure being exerted on your arms? It's almost unbelievable. The heat given off by the blast is just as astonishing a number as the pressure. There was evidence that clay tiles, whose melting point is thirteen times hotter than that of the boiling point of water, had Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 5. Essay on Hiroshima, by John Hersey While looking for a boat to carry the severely injured across the river, Mr Tanimoto "... Found a good–sized pleasure punt drawn up on the bank... five dead men, nearly naked, badly burned..." (Hersey, 37) near it, he "... lifted the men away from the boat... he experienced such horror at disturbing the dead..." (Hersey, 37). On August 6, 1945 the United States dropped an atomic bomb on the cities ofHiroshima and Nagasaki, to end the war between them. Hiroshima, by John Hersey is a book about six survivors of the first atomic bomb ever dropped on a city. The six survivors tell their stories of where they were before the bomb was dropped, what they did after the bomb was dropped, and what their life was like years after the bomb. The book also...show more content... Not wanting to let go of her expired infant Mrs. Kamai was devastated by the loss of her daughter. Two girls lost their family and Mrs. Kamai lost her baby, due to the bomb children lost their parents and parents lost their infants. After the bomb was dropped many people had developed serious health issues, many not knowing they had any. Father Wilhelm Kleinsorge, a German priest, had to have repeated visits to the hospital, to be treated for medical symptoms commonly found in the A–bomb survivors. "Back in the hospital in Tokyo for the second time, Father Kleinsorge was suffering from fever, diarrhea, wounds that would not heal, wildly fluctuating blood counts, and utter exhaustion. For the rest of his life, he was to be a classic case history of... borderline form of A–bomb sickness... many of which turned up in hibakusha..." (Hersey, 110). A few years after the atom bomb was dropped many survivors, commonly called hibakusha, meaning explosion –affected persons, had to make many trips to the hospital because the United States dropped the atom bomb. Dr. Fujii, a physician who has a private hospital, planned to have a gathering on New Year's Day with his family, but never showed up. "At half past eleven, Dr. Fujii had not appeared, and Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 6. Hiroshima, By John Hersey On August 6, 1945, Hiroshima was unfortunate to be the first city of an atomic attack by the United States. Thousands of people were not so lucky to survive and tell their story of the aftermath of the Hiroshima bombing. In the book Hiroshima, by John Hersey, he writes about the tragic experience of six lucky survivors, on the day of the bombing in Hiroshima. Hersey wrote Hiroshima to give an insight about the experience of pain, hopelessness, and difficult time for many people of what used to be a nice city. The book started off by telling the time, date, and what the six people were doing right before the bomb went off in Hiroshima. Many civilians in Hiroshima thought that someday they would be attacked by the United States, but no one...show more content... He would eventually find his family after running back and forth to find out if they were safe then he got emotional. Father Kleinsorge was left with minor injuries, but a girl ran to him asking for his help saying her mother and sister were buried under their home. These two encouraging men went out of their way to help many people, from family to people they never knew existed. Dr. Sasaki is another lucky one with minimum harm. This young doctor that did not have his license yet, ministered to people. In this crisis, he would not need his license to help thousands of people with their injuries. The other three survivors were not so lucky. They had more than minimum injuries. Dr. Fujii was on a porch in his underwear. After the shock wave hit, the building he was in fell over into the river. Here Dr. Fujii was stuck in the river with two heavy timbers on his chest. He forced his way out, before he drowned in the river. As for Mrs. Nakamura, she was in her kitchen when she saw the bright white light and the shock wave that brought her house down on her and her three children. With all of her motherly strength she freed herself first and then rescued her three children. Miss Sasaki could not see the bright white light from the office she was in. Instead she was hit by surprise and was filled with fear not knowing what was going on. She was then buried for hours by a bookcase that broke her leg, the floor above her, and the roof. Doctors had no clue Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 7. Essay on John Hersey's Hiroshima John Hersey's Hiroshima In John Hersey's Hiroshima, he based his book upon the one perspective that, the bombing of Hiroshima was an act of inhumanity. What Hersey failed to do was to give the perspective of the Americans. Hersey did not account for the Pearl Harbor bombing of 1941 or the death march in the Japanese Bataan Camps in 1942. Without giving both perspectives, Hersey does not give the reader a fair chance to form their own opinion; instead, the reader is swayed into Hersey's bias beliefs of the event. Hersey's Hiroshima was originally an article written for The New YorkerMagazine in order to help a "reader identity with deceased and survivors of the Hiroshima's bombing" (The New Yorker). He accomplished this by...show more content... One scientist from the Manhattan Project, the creators of the atomic bomb, in response to Hersey's article in the New Yorker wrote, "I am filled with such shame to recall the whoopee spirit, at the announcement of bombing Hiroshima" (The New Yorker). This type of reaction, after reading Hersey's vivid work on the Hiroshima bombing, is understandable and expected. What Hersey failed to do was to give the other perspective, of why America took these actions against Hiroshima? The two major historic events that Hersey failed to mention were the bombing of Pearl Harbor and the death march at the Bataan Camps. These two instances show the attacks that Japan made against America. December 7, 1941, Japan performed a surprise attack on America at Pearl Harbor. "According to Japanese feudal code of honor, the idea of a surprise is recommended and it raises no moral problems" (Sulzberger 146). During Japan's attack, they broke the seal of trust. "Japan's Ambassador and Diplomatic agent were in Washington pretending to have been seeking a negotiated settlement between the two countries" (Sulzberger 146). America lost over 3,000 service men from this bombing. This type of betrayal could only cause anger and determination to strike back. The death march at the Japanese Bataan Camp, of April 1942, Japanese officers enslaved about "75,000 men, 12,000 of which were American soldiers" (Bergamini 1168). "The soldiers were forced to march sixty miles with Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 8. Hiroshima Health Issues Essay During the bombing of Hiroshima, casualty rates among medical personnel were in the range between 80 to 93 percent. Injuries resulting from the bombing often went untreated, and the survivors did not receive health care for some time. The book Hiroshima discusses this issue in great length, specifically why they were not given the necessary aid. The government of Hiroshima played a major role in this. In the novel Hiroshima, the human rights issue of health care affected multiple countries by inducing the development of Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The bombing of Hiroshima clearly created the human rights issue of lack of health care in Japan. "Of the city's 298 medical doctors, 270 (90%) became A–bomb victims. Casualty rates among pharmacists, nurses, and other medical professionals ranged between 80% and 93%. Eighteen emergency hospitals and 32 first–aid clinics were destroyed, and most of the workers needed to restore these health facilities were killed or injured. Nearby army medical facilities were also mostly destroyed." (Atomic Bomb Museum)The text informs the readers of the high death rates. These deaths were of a variety of people, immigrants, tourists, and Japanese people. Not only are the deaths greater...show more content... "Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well–being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, and housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control" (United Nations Declaration of Human Rights).The United Nations Declaration of Human Rights immediately brought about a change to the world as a whole. Not only did they decide it inhuman to keep health care from citizens, but they set out other standards of Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 9. John Hersey's Hiroshima Essay John Hersey's Hiroshima John Hersey's Hiroshima is a factual account about the day the United States government dropped the first atom bomb on the city of Hiroshima, Japan. John interviewed six survivors and reported their stories in a factual but interesting fashion. He gives a brief description of each person and tells of his or her daily activities both before and after the explosion. Hersey's descriptions of people and events give the reader a feeling of actually being at the scene. He intensifies each character's need to survive. The sense of survival is deeply rooted in the hearts of most people. One of the survivors ("hibakusha" as they were known), Mrs. Hatsuyo Nakamura, is described as "...a tailor's widow,...show more content... Mrs. Nakamura's sense of survival saved her life and the lives of her three children. Even though her rationality was blurred at times, such as getting overcoats for the children in the middle of summer and throwing her sewing machine into the water tank, her desire to survive pushed her beyond her limits. In comparison, the "Testimony of Toshiko Saeki" tells of a young woman's struggle to find her family after the bomb was dropped. The woman's name is Toshiko Saeki who, at the time of the bombing, was with her children at her parents' home which was far away from Hiroshima. She saw a flash of light then felt heat surrounding her body. She then heard a loud noise and saw windows and doors being blown away into the air. When she realized what had happened her first instinct was to go to Hiroshima to find the rest of her family. On her way she saw a naked man holding a piece of iron over his head. She was embarrassed and turned her back on him. "The man was passing by me, thn, I don't know why, But I ran after him and I asked him to stop for a moment. I asked him, "Which part of Hiroshima was attacked?" Then the man put down the piece of iron and he started at me. He said, "You're Toshiko, aren't you?" He said, "Toshiko!""(Saeki 1). Toshiko couldn't tell who he was until he said, "It's me! It's me, Toshiko! You can't tell?"(Saeki 1). She then realized it was one of her brothers, the second eldest. Toshiko searched for her Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 10. Expository Essay On Hiroshima Hiroshima Expository Essay In Hiroshima, Japan on August 6th, 1945 the lives of 6 survivors changed. But it changed for the best for some of those people. In the book Hiroshima by John Hersey, we need to understand how to think about something before doing it, and it's better to think about our past and how that changes the way of life. In life the best thing to do is to think before you say/do something bad. When America dropped the Atom bomb "Of the 1,780 nurses alive and well 1,654 were badly hurt/dead after the bomb." (Hersey 24). The Americans weren't thinking about the lives that would be lost due to their careless act. The bomb's radiation would later kill 100,000 people within the next year. The example of the 1,780 nurses being Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 11. Hiroshima (The Book) Essay Title: Hiroshima Type of book: Non–Fiction Summary: The book, Hiroshima, is the story of six individuals who experienced the true effects of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, August 6, 1945. Miss Toshinki Sasaki, a clerk in the East Asia Tin Works factory, just sat down in the plant office and was turning to converse with the girl at the next desk when the bomb exploded. Dr. Masakazu Fujii, a physician, was relaxing on his porch, which overlooked the Kyo River, where he was reading the morning periodical when the shell detonated. Before the eruption, Mrs. Hatsuyo Nakamura was observing her neighbor destruct his house as part of a fire lane in preparation of an American attack. Previous to the attack, Father...show more content... By nightfall of that day, 10,000 victims had invaded the Red Cross hospital and Dr. Sasaki was totally worn out. He had lost his glasses in the explosion and had taken a pair from a wounded nurse. Although these were not his prescription, he could see well enough to do some bandaging. He tried to bandage the ones that he thought had a chance of survival. He felt that he could not afford to spend time on those that he was sure would die despite his efforts. Miss Sasaki spent two days and nights under the rubble with her leg crushed. Her leg became swollen and discolored. All this time, she was without food or water. On the third day, some of her friends who thought that she was dead came to look for her body but found her instead. Her friends informed her that the rest of her family had surely perished at the Tamura Pediatric Hospital, where her young baby brother had been a patient. Later, some men carried her to a truck to a relief station in Inokuchi and two Army doctors examined her. From there, she was placed on a launch to the nearby island of Ninoshima. This began her long period of hospitalization to recover from her serious leg wound. About 12 – 14 days after the explosion, Father Kleinsorge, Mrs. Nakamura and Mr. Tanimoto fell ill with general malaise, weakness, tiredness, and fever. They did not know it but they were coming down with a disease that was later to be called radiation sickness. Miss Sasaki lay in Get more content on HelpWriting.net
  • 12. Essay on Hiroshima by John Hersey Hiroshima by John Hersey The non–fiction book Hiroshima by John Hersey is an engaging text with a powerful message in it. The book is a biographical text about lives of six people Miss Sasaki, Dr. Fujii, Mrs. Nakamura, Father Kleinsorge, Dr. Sasaki and Rev. Tanimoto in Hiroshima, Japan and how their lives completely changed at 8:15 on the 6th of August 1945 by the dropping of the first atomic bomb. The author, John Hersey, through his use of descriptive language the in book Hiroshima exposes the many horrors of a nuclear attack. Through the shocking and troubling graphic detail of human suffering and the physical effect of radiation and burns caused by the dropping of the atomic bomb Hersey exposes to the reader the deeply...show more content... In the book Hiroshima the author not only exposes the physical impacts right after the bomb but also weeks and years after the nuclear attack. The effect of radiation caused by the atomic bomb on people for most lasted for the rest of there live and often was the cause of the death and for those who had children affected some of there children. One of the six people interviewed, Father Kleinsorge who had only suffered minor cuts when the bomb had been dropped, a month later they still hadn't healed and was suffering from high fever and abdominal pain and low white cell count. But his character couldn't receive the one thing which would have probably helped, a blood transfusion because with atomic bomb patients they weren't sure that if you stick needles in them they'll stop bleeding. By telling the reader about Father Kleinsorge Hersey shows the reader that the nuclear attack caused many people to suffer from radiation sick months after the actual bombing and the irony is that one of thing that could save them could also kill them. The author also tells us that by 1950 the incidence of leukemia in hibakusha (survivors of the atomic bomb) was between ten and fifteen time above the normal, this was five years after the bomb had hit Hiroshima. Hersey does this to show the reader that even for those that are lucky enough to escape death and the terrible burns from the bomb they still are affected physically by the effect of Get more content on HelpWriting.net