Hiroshima Peace Declaration Marking 62nd Anniversary
A-bombing
August 6, 2007 |
From www.pcf.city.hiroshima.jp/declaration/English
Speech of Mayor Tadatoshi Akiba which he gave during
the 62nd anniversary ceremony of the bombing of Hiroshima.
That fateful summer. 8:15. The roar of a B-29
breaks the morning calm. A parachute opens in the blue
sky. Then suddenly, a flash, an enormous blast — silence—hell
on Earth.
The eyes of young girls watching the parachute were melted. Their
faces became giant charred blisters. The skin of people
seeking help dangled from their fingernails. Their
hair stood on end. Their clothes were ripped to shreds. People
trapped in houses toppled by the blast were burned alive. Others
died when their eyeballs and internal organs burst from their
bodies—Hiroshima was a hell where those who somehow
survived envied the dead.
Within the year, 140,000 had died. Many who escaped death
initially are still suffering from leukemia, thyroid cancer,
and a vast array of other afflictions.
But there was more. Sneered at for their keloid scars,
discriminated against in employment and marriage, unable
to find understanding for profound emotional wounds, survivors
suffered and struggled day after day, questioning the meaning
of life.
And yet, the message born of that agony is a beam of light
now shining the way for the human family. To ensure
that “no one else ever suffers as we did,” the
hibakusha have continuously spoken of experiences they would
rather forget, and we must never forget their accomplishments
in preventing a third use of nuclear weapons.
Despite their best efforts, vast arsenals of nuclear weapons
remain in high states of readiness—deployed or easily
available. Proliferation is gaining momentum, and the
human family still faces the peril of extinction. This
is because a handful of old-fashioned leaders, clinging to
an early 20th century worldview in thrall to the rule of
brute strength, are rejecting global democracy, turning their
backs on the reality of the atomic bombings and the message
of the hibakusha.
However, here in the 21st century the time has come when
these problems can actually be solved through the power of
the people. Former colonies have become independent.
Democratic governments have taken root. Learning the
lessons of history, people have created international rules
prohibiting attacks on non-combatants and the use of inhumane
weapons. They have worked hard to make the United
Nations an instrument for the resolution of international
disputes. And now city governments, entities that have
always walked with and shared in the tragedy and pain of
their citizens, are rising up. In the light of human
wisdom, they are leveraging the voices of their citizens
to lift international politics.
Because “Cities suffer most from war,” Mayors
for Peace, with 1,698 city members around the world, is actively
campaigning to eliminate all nuclear weapons by 2020.
In Hiroshima, we are continuing our effort to communicate
the A-bomb experience by holding A-bomb exhibitions in 101
cities in the US and facilitating establishment of Hiroshima-Nagasaki
Peace Study Courses in universities around the world. American
mayors have taken the lead in our Cities Are Not Targets
project. Mayors in the Czech Republic are opposing
the deployment of a missile defense system. The mayor
of Guernica-Lumo is calling for a resurgence of morality
in international politics. The mayor of Ypres is providing
an international secretariat for Mayors for Peace, while
other Belgian mayors are contributing funds, and many more
mayors around the world are working with their citizens on
pioneering initiatives. In October this year, at the
World Congress of United Cities and Local Governments, which
represents the majority of our planet’s population,
cities will express the will of humanity as we call for the
elimination of nuclear weapons.
The government of Japan, the world’s only A-bombed
nation, is duty-bound to humbly learn the philosophy of the
hibakusha along with the facts of the atomic bombings and
to spread this knowledge through the world. At the
same time, to abide by international law and fulfill its
good-faith obligation to press for nuclear weapons abolition,
the Japanese government should take pride in and protect,
as is, the Peace Constitution, while clearly saying “No,” to
obsolete and mistaken US policies. We further demand,
on behalf of the hibakusha whose average age now exceeds
74, improved and appropriate assistance, to be extended also
to those living overseas or exposed in “black rain
areas.”
Sixty-two years after the atomic bombing, we offer today
our heartfelt prayers for the peaceful repose of all its
victims and of Iccho Itoh, the mayor of Nagasaki shot down
on his way toward nuclear weapons abolition. Let us
pledge here and now to take all actions required to bequeath
to future generations a nuclear-weapon-free world.
Tadatoshi Akiba
President of Mayors for Peace
Mayor of Hiroshima
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