School victims of Nagasaki A-bombing remembered
Aug. 4, Kyodo - About 5,500 pupils and teachers who died
in the U.S. atomic bombing of Nagasaki in
1945 were remembered at a memorial service
in the southwestern Japanese city Wednesday.
About 300 people, including relatives and
Nagasaki elementary and junior high school
students, attended the ceremony in the town
of Hirano in Nagasaki Prefecture.
Silence was observed at 11:02 a.m., the time
the U.S. atom bomb devastated the city on
Aug. 9, 1945, at the 18th annual ceremony
of this kind.
''Peace is the wish of not only Nagasaki
but also of the entire world,'' said Ryoko
Yamaguchi, 11, a sixth-grader at Inasa Elementary
School. ''Our school alone lost more than
100 children and teachers in the bombing.
We want to honor the memories of our elder
brothers and sisters.''
Minoru Masuyama, 81, representative of former
teachers who survived the bombing, said,
''The atrocities of the atomic bomb cannot
be forgotten. I hope you (children) will
establish a peaceful Japan in which you can
say you were glad to be born.''
The U.S. atomic bombing of Nagasaki came
three days after the atom bomb attack on
Hiroshima. Many survivors still suffer physical
and mental anguish as a result of the bombings.