First Annual Sadako
Peace Day
August 1996
Mayor Harriet
Miller declared August 6, 1996 as "The First Annual Sadako
Peace Day." In making this proclamation, she called "for
efforts in our community and throughout the world to abolish nuclear
weapons and to prevent people everywhere, particularly children,
from suffering the horrors of war."
Sadako Sasaki was a two-year old girl
in Hiroshima, who was exposed to radiation when the atomic bomb
was dropped on her city on August 6, 1945. She developed radiation-induced
leukemia ten years later. Japanese legend has it that one's wish
will come true if one folds a thousand paper cranes. Sadako began
folding paper cranes with the wish to get well and achieve world
peace. She wrote a poem, "I will write peace on your wings
and you will fly all over the world." Sadako died with 646
cranes folded, and her classmates finished folding the paper cranes.
Sadako's story has become known to people all over the world,
and the folding of paper cranes has become a symbol of world peace.
To commemorate Sadako Peace Day, the Nuclear Age
Peace Foundation and La Casa de Maria hosted an outdoor ceremony
at Sadako Peace Garden at La Casa de Maria. The ceremony, with
some 100 people in attendance, included a musical program arranged
by Harry Sargous of The Music Academy of the West, and poetry
read by several Santa Barbara poets, including Gene Knudsen Hoffman
and Sojourner Kincaid-Rolle.
Foundation president David Krieger summarized the
importance of the event and the day: "This day August 6th
has many names. For some, looking back in history, it is Hiroshima
Day, a time to recall the terrible devastation that took place
when a single nuclear weapon was dropped on the city of Hiroshima.
For some, looking to the future, it is Abolition Day, a time to
rededicate one's efforts to the elimination of all nuclear weapons
in the world. These are important perspectives. For us here today,
the day is also Sadako Peace Day, a commemoration of the loss
of an innocent child's life as a result of the bombing of Hiroshima,
and a rededication to preventing other children from being injured
and killed as a result of war, any war."
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