Curio |
Life After the Atomic Blast, as Told by Hiroshima’s Survivors
Eighty years after Hiroshima, the effects of the atomic bomb are still unfolding—not just in history books, but in the lives of survivors and their families. Kazumi Kuwahara, a third-generation hibakusha, carries both the memories and the medical aftermath of that day. Her grandmother, Emiko Yamanaka, was 11 when the bomb fell. Today, their stories—once silenced by censorship and stigma—are teaching a new generation and framing our responsibility to remember what happened there. Elizabeth Chappell with The Conversation has the full story.
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