Jump to content
TotallyOz

Survivors mark 75th anniversary of world’s 1st atomic attack

Recommended Posts

  • Members
5 hours ago, Lucky said:

I have been to the Peace Park in Hiroshima. It is a very moving experience. They have an indoor replica of the city after the bombing which shows the great extent of the damage. I got a dirty look from a young Asian boy when I left.

I don't remember because  I was just three years old. My mother, grandmother  and uncle remembered always that  my grandfather died that day.  My grandparents still lived together, but apparently rarely talked to each other. (My grandma was born in Scotland - she had Eight children.)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

13 hours ago, Latbear4blk said:

The rest of the world will never forget that the nation self declared moral leader of the world has been the only one to use nuclear devices, mass murdering innocent civilians. Not once, but twice. 

After the war ended, and bomb policy going forward was being fiercely argued in government, Oppenheimer even went so far — while resolutely arguing against development of the H-bomb — as to advocate for the development of ‘small’ battlefield fission weapons.

Absurdity from the Father himself.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members
On 8/6/2020 at 9:32 AM, Lucky said:

I have been to the Peace Park in Hiroshima. It is a very moving experience. They have an indoor replica of the city after the bombing which shows the great extent of the damage. I got a dirty look from a young Asian boy when I left.

Ever notice that 99% of the visitors to see the sunken Arizona at Pearl Harbor are Japanese ? Also "different". 

 

 

DC  Admirals' celebration of the bombing with special cake trucked in from St. Louis. Copies of the cake were sold all over the US. A new two-piece swimsuit was named after Bikini Atoll. 

Atomic+Cake-lo.jpgExercise_Desert_Rock_I_(Buster-Jangle_DoMiss A Bomb 19466a00d83542d51e69e20147e381da38970b-pi

original-30927-1438789268-16.jpg?downsiz9f3f1468c5f38241e2b2aba78e186d6c.jpg

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

23 minutes ago, tassojunior said:

Ever notice that 99% of the visitors to see the sunken Arizona at Pearl Harbor are Japanese ? Also "different". 

 

 

DC  Admirals' celebration of the bombing with special cake trucked in from St. Louis. Copies of the cake were sold all over the US. A new two-piece swimsuit was named after Bikini Atoll. 

Atomic+Cake-lo.jpgExercise_Desert_Rock_I_(Buster-Jangle_DoMiss A Bomb 19466a00d83542d51e69e20147e381da38970b-pi

original-30927-1438789268-16.jpg?downsiz9f3f1468c5f38241e2b2aba78e186d6c.jpg

 

Still our national attitude.

Nauseating.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

The Japanese were brutal to other Asians in the 1930s 1940s, especially Koreans.  And yes I have visited Toyko and like the city and greatly regret I didn't have time to see more. But an earthquake that year (1995) prevented it.

 

My dad was stationed in the Philippines in the Second World War and saw the devastated country side thanks to Japan. I saw it too because he filmed it 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Buddy2 said:

The Japanese were brutal to other Asians in the 1930s 1940s, especially Koreans.  And yes I have visited Toyko and like the city and greatly regret I didn't have time to see more. But an earthquake that year (1995) prevented it.

 

My dad was stationed in the Philippines in the Second World War and saw the devastated country side thanks to Japan. I saw it too because he filmed it 

_w1700.jpg

Japan Yesterday

J Robert Oppenheimer, father of the atomic bomb, visits postwar Japan

Sep. 5, 2019  06:15 am JST  7 Comments
 
 

By Patrick Parr

 

TOKYO

At a press conference in Tokyo on Sept 5, 1960, physicist and former Manhattan Project director J. Robert Oppenheimer was surrounded by a group of reporters from Japanese newspapers. Blinding camera lights and popping noises from photographers nearly ended the interview before it started.

“This country is famous for its optical equipment,” Oppenheimer said, wincing from the rush of light. “But perhaps we should stop.”

They didn’t. One cameraman was so persistent that Oppenheimer, lighting his pipe, tossed a match at him. “I won’t say another word until the lights are out.”

With the lights dimmed, one nervous reporter had a question for the atomic bomb “mastermind.”

“I should like to ask you — although the question may be a little bit naive — to say a few words about your feelings in coming to Japan as a man responsible for the development of the bombs that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.”

Ever since accepting the invitation by the Japan Committee for Intellectual Interchange (JCII) to deliver a series of lectures in Tokyo and Osaka, Oppenheimer expected this question would arise. Dressed in a suit and smoking his pipe, the physicist grinned, then said that “it is not a naive question.”

He took a moment to gather his thoughts.

“I do not think coming to Japan changed my sense of anguish about my part in this whole piece of history. Nor has it fully made me regret my responsibility for the technical success of the enterprise.” He paused, then tried to summarize: “It isn’t that I don’t feel bad. It is that I don’t feel worse tonight than last night.”

He was also asked another predictable question: Will you be visiting Hiroshima?

Perhaps jetlagged, his response was short and to the point: “I would like to, but it is not clear that it will be practical.”

 

Political tension in Japan surrounded Oppenheimer and his wife Kitty. Just four months before his visit, a crowd of at least 210,000 pro-Communist Japanese watched in celebration as protesters hanged and burned effigies of President Dwight D Eisenhower and Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi, their faces resembling a “grotesque, leering puppet with big pointed ears.” A sign on the gallows in Japanese kanji read: “Kishi, Eisenhower, We Order You Transferred To Hell.”

The crowd wanted to send a message that they were furious with the newly negotiated U.S.-Japan Security Treaty and were demanding more favorable working conditions as well as nuclear disarmament. Eisenhower had been set to receive an honorary doctorate from Tokyo University in June but cancelled his visit due to security risks.

Oppenheimer knew all about security risks. He was one — at least according to a September 1954 decision by the Atomic Energy Commission. In the throes of McCarthyism, the AEC concluded that Oppenheimer, due to his suspicious Communist ties, could not be trusted with top-secret government information, and his security clearance was revoked. For years, Oppenheimer had been persona non grata in Washington, D.C., but welcomed by a world eager to learn more from the atomic scientist.

As Oppenheimer began his trip, he found the Japanese people grateful, even enthusiastic, at his presence in the country. Aspiring scientists were eager to learn from him, and the majority at least appeared to hold no ill will toward him for the bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki that killed hundreds of thousands of people.

While talking to the press at the Miyako Hotel in Kyoto on Sept 13, Oppenheimer was clear: he wanted to educate as many as he could about the importance of science. “[Atomic scientists] professionally involved have the responsibility to inform and explain what they know publicly, if allowed,” he said, perhaps in a slight jab at the American government. “They are responsible for imparting their fears to the government if necessary… this responsibility is not specific to scientists but is true to all others who follow their vocation and conscience.”

Then, he made his answer more personal. “Japanese people know that this is a time in human history of profound change and problems. I have the duty and hope to talk and meet your people about our common problems and about the difficulty which confronts us.”

One reporter latched on to these “problems” and asked him if he believed the world would soon face “annihilation” due to scientific advancements.

Oppenheimer gave him a quick retort. “I share that fear.”

During his trip, the JCII did an excellent job keeping Oppenheimer from any kind of public spat. Still, all he needed to do was pick up an English-language Japanese newspaper to read headlines about the lingering effects that his Manhattan Project team helped put into motion nineteen years ago.

From The Japan Times:

  • “A-FALLOUT POLLUTION INCREASING” (Sept. 10, 1960)
  • “GENSUIKYO SLATES ANOTHER CAMPAIGN” (Sept. 12, 1960)
  • “LEUKEMIA CASES GROWING IN NAGASAKI, HIROSHIMA” (Sept. 19, 1960)

Perhaps due to the potential of Gensuikyo (Japanese for “The Japan Council Against Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs”) protesters, most of the lectures were closed to the public, but the physicist did have at least one recorded moment of downtime. In Tokyo, there was an assembly of professors who met each month, their general committee name being The Society of Science and Man. The surviving transcript revealed an honest, direct man rather than what biographer Ray Monk described as Oppenheimer’s public voice, “courtly, evasive and elaborate.”

“The peoples of this world must unite or they will perish. This war, that has ravaged so much of the earth, has written these words. The atomic bomb has spelled them out for all men to understand.” –J. Robert Oppenheimer, October 1945

In this safe space of intellectuals, an ocean away from his home country, Oppenheimer felt able to express himself without any kind of protectiveness. He criticized England as “a small society because of its inherent snobbery… [the elite] go to the same colleges, they meet at the same clubs and they frequent each other and read the same things.” More specifically, Oppenheimer took a shot at the English philosophers, saying they are “out of touch with science, they are out of touch with politics, they are out of touch with history. And what they are in touch with is themselves.”

The relaxed discussion also flipped to the lack of shame in the field of advertising, one of Oppenheimer’s true peeves. “[Advertisers] fill the air, the newspapers, the magazines, the TV screen and the very atmosphere with incredible and vulgar lies. Everybody knows this. It creates a background against which excellence withers and it is my great hope that you will be spared and will help spare your country from this pestilence.”

One moment on his trip through Japan stood out. On the afternoon of Sept 17, Oppenheimer appeared in front of a “capacity” crowd at the Asahi Kaikan Hall in Osaka. His crowds had been “large and appreciative” so far and that day’s lecture was labeled “Tradition and Discovery.” Different than his other talks in front of physicists and other like-minded scientists, Oppenheimer was looking to inspire and enlighten rather than inform and instruct. He started with a history of science, going as far back as the ancient Greeks and then on to modern times.

“When Columbus set out on his voyage, he wrote in the first page of his book, 'Jesus and Mary be with us on our journey.’ This was, of course, partly because of the terror of going into an unknown world and partly because of the realization of the great and irrevocable change his journey was to bring about. In this mid-20th century, we are in a similar position.”

Still, there was no turning back, even if a discovery, such as the atomic bomb, had become “a source of terror.” As Oppenheimer saw it, “many of us talk about living in the Atomic Age. I sympathize with this talk. But we cannot by any action recreate the world of 20 years ago. The knowledge of [the] atomic bomb cannot be buried away.” The physicist emphasized a need to continue having dialogues and sharing information to promote a “universal brotherhood,” then told the packed house a concern that applies especially to us now living in 2019. “There are strong temptations to reduce the world to smaller communities of specially chosen men. But I hope we will never yield to these temptations.”

 

Oppenheimer in the news. Sept. 1960.jpg
Newspaper clippings from J Robert Oppenheimer's 1960 visit to Japan.  Photo: Japan Today

Near the end of his talk, perhaps during a question-and-answer session, a 21-year-old American student named Ted Reynolds rose from the crowd and introduced himself. His family lived in Hiroshima and they had been active in protesting nuclear weapons tests in the Pacific, most famously in 1958 by taking their family yacht, the Phoenix, near the Eniwetok Atoll (a part of the Marshall Islands). Young Ted hadn’t come to publicly debate Oppenheimer. Rather, he’d been sent by his father to deliver an invitation: Come to Hiroshima, they ask. In the letter, which Oppenheimer accepted during his talk and would keep for the rest of his life, the Reynolds family was sincere: “[Hiroshima citizens] bear no animosity toward any individual for the tragedy which overtook them… their only hope is that there will never be another Hiroshima.”

The letter went on. “We can understand the delicacy of the situation, but I do hope your decision was not dictated by any feeling that you might meet with personal unfriendliness.”

Oppenheimer told Ted that he would love nothing more than to “quietly” see Hiroshima without the annoying cameras or press, and perhaps visit the recently completed Peace Park. For most of his post-war career, Oppenheimer had held complicated feelings about the atomic bomb, once confessing to President Harry Truman that he had “blood on his hands” (said Truman: “I don’t want to see that son of a bitch in this office ever again!”). Later, in a state of deep melancholy, he quoted a Sanskrit translation from the Bhagavad Gita, “Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.”

Oppenheimer never did visit Hiroshima. Again, the JCII did not want any trouble, and they were paying him handsomely to deliver talks as he enjoyed sightseeing, “tea parties” and honored “receptions” with Kitty.

Yet for a man who helped birth the atomic age and who grappled profoundly with the consequences, it may have felt somewhat relieving for him to see a country forgive and embrace the man who’d been dubbed the “father of the atomic bomb.”

After what ended up being an extended trip abroad, Oppenheimer and his wife returned to the United States. In late 1963, the stigma of being a “security risk” was lifted after he was awarded by John F Kennedy the prestigious Enrico Fermi Award (posthumously by Lyndon Johnson), for his work in theoretical physics. Four years later, in Princeton, New Jersey, Oppenheimer died of throat cancer at the age of 62.

https://japantoday.com/category/features/lifestyle/j-robert-oppenheimer-father-of-the-atomic-bomb-visits-post-war-japan

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members
On 8/7/2020 at 7:56 PM, tassojunior said:

Ever notice that 99% of the visitors to see the sunken Arizona at Pearl Harbor are Japanese ? Also "different". 

 

 

DC  Admirals' celebration of the bombing with special cake trucked in from St. Louis. Copies of the cake were sold all over the US. A new two-piece swimsuit was named after Bikini Atoll. 

Atomic+Cake-lo.jpgExercise_Desert_Rock_I_(Buster-Jangle_DoMiss A Bomb 19466a00d83542d51e69e20147e381da38970b-pi

original-30927-1438789268-16.jpg?downsiz9f3f1468c5f38241e2b2aba78e186d6c.jpg

 

What do you mean, 99% of the Arizona visitors are Japanese?   Are you exaggerating to make a point or is that data documented somewhere?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

53 minutes ago, Buddy2 said:

I was three years old when my dad came home from the Philippines in 1946. Could not figure out who he was, but still glad to see him,  I sort of remember.

One frequently attempts to figure out how your solipsistic remarks have any bearing at all on the previous posts.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members
5 hours ago, Pete1111 said:

What do you mean, 99% of the Arizona visitors are Japanese?   Are you exaggerating to make a point or is that data documented somewhere?

I've only been to the Arizona memorial once but when we went we seemed to be the only non-Japanese in about 200 people. You know the majority of tourists to Hawaii are always Japanese and almost half the population of Hawaii is Japanese-American. I googled and the site intentionally does not keep records of the nationality of visitors and tour guides there have said about half are Japanese tourists.  WW2 is viewed differently by the Japanese tourists as is Pearl Harbor and it's a little weird being at the Arizona memorial with them. 

https://www.nytimes.com/1985/12/07/world/for-most-japanese-pearl-harbor-is-just-a-footnote.html#:~:text=George%20Hogan%2C%20a%20tour%20guide,nation's%20ambivalence%20about%20the%20war.

Edited by tassojunior
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members
35 minutes ago, AdamSmith said:

Was the Philippines in any way a militarily or strategically useful target for atomic bombing by the US?

I have been posting in Internet forums for almost 20 years and have never criticized someone for taking a thread in a different direction.

 

So  I have no other response. Just sad.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members
On 8/9/2020 at 9:25 PM, Buddy2 said:

I was three years old when my dad came home from the Philippines in 1946. Could not figure out who he was, but still glad to see him,  I sort of remember.

My Dad was on Tinian and Okinawa at the end.  He came home, got married, and 5 kids later I was born.

Dad never talked about Tinian, at least not when I was as boy, and I learned about it after he was long gone.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Pete1111 said:

My Dad was on Tinian and Okinawa at the end.  He came home, got married, and 5 kids later I was born.

Dad never talked about Tinian, at least not when I was as boy, and I learned about it after he was long gone.

My father was in the Army toward the end of WWII, stationed in Germany, and never spoke of it.

Except, once or twice, to voice his disgust with his fellow Post Office  workers who endlessly gloried in their days ‘shooting those Nazis to their graves.’

Not to doubt the necessity thereof, but the whole business just disgusted him. And especially the glorifying in remembrance.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 8/6/2020 at 10:40 PM, AdamSmith said:

Very, very moving sculpture by Henry Moore on the grounds of the U. of Chicago above Stagg Field where Fermi built the first self-sustaining nuclear reactior.

Henry_Moore_Nuclear_Energy.jpg

https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Henry_Moore_Nuclear_Energy.jpg#mw-jump-to-license

Combines images of the nuclear mushroom cloud with the classical Nazi helmet.

and so asks: who were truly the more terrible nazis here?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.



×
×
  • Create New...