A Peace Message:
On the fifty-fifth anniversaries of the bombings of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki
by David Krieger*, August 2000
The world changed
dramatically in the 20th century, a century of unprecedented violence.
We humans learned how to release the power of the atom, and this
led quickly to the creation and use of nuclear weapons. At Hiroshima
and Nagasaki, this terrible new power was unleashed at the end
of a bloody and costly war. Tens of thousands of persons, including
large numbers of women and children, were killed in the massive
explosion and radiation release of these new tools of destruction.
A new icon was born: the mushroom cloud. It represented mankind’s
murderous prowess. In the years that followed, nuclear weapons
multiplied in a mad arms race. We achieved the possibility of
creating a global Hiroshima and ending most life on Earth.
If, one hundred
years from now, you read this message, humanity will probably
have succeeded in freeing itself from the scourge of nuclear weapons.
That will be a great triumph. It will mean that we have met the
first great challenge to our survival as a species. It will mean
that we have learned and applied the lesson that the hibakusha,
survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, worked so diligently to teach
us, that human beings and nuclear weapons cannot co-exist.
There is an alternative possibility,
that of no civilization or human beings left alive one hundred
years from now. Such a future would mean that we failed completely
as a species, that we could not put away our primitive and violent
means of settling our differences. Perhaps we would have simply
stumbled by a combination of apathy and arrogance into an accidental
nuclear conflagration. It would mean that all the beauty and elegant
and subtle thought of humans that developed over our existence
on Earth would have vanished. There would be no one left to appreciate
what was or might have been. No eyes would read this letter to
the future. There would be no future and the past would be erased.
Meaning itself would be erased along with humanity.
We have a choice. We can end the nuclear weapons
era, or we can run the risk that nuclear weapons will end the
human era. The choice should not be difficult. In fact, the vast
majority of humans would choose to eliminate nuclear weapons.
Today, a small number of individuals in a small number of countries
are holding humanity hostage to a nuclear holocaust. To change
this situation and assure a future free of nuclear threat, people
everywhere must exercise their rights to life and make their voices
heard. They must speak out and act before it is too late. They
must demand an end to the nuclear weapons era.
If this message reaches one hundred years into
the future it will mean that enough of my contemporaries and the
generations that follow will have heard the messages of the hibakusha
and will have chosen the paths of hope and peace. Humanity will
have conquered its most terrible tools of destruction. If this
is the case, I believe that your future will be bright.
*David Krieger is President
of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.
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