Hiroshima
Bombing 60th Anniversary
August
Women’s Peace Event a Big Success!
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by Twila Tomita and Annie Noguchi
A standing-room-only
audience of 350 provided a receptive group for the August
Women’s Peace Event performers and speakers at the Secretary
of State’s auditorium on August 6, 2005. Approximately 25
Florin JACL members attended this important event.
Florin
JACL president Cheryl Miles was a skillful Mistress of
Ceremonies for the one-hour-and-forty-minute program held on the
60th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima,
Ably
chaired by Florin’s own Janice Nakashima, the program opened
with Sakura Minyo Japanese Folk Dance Group. Hiroshima survivor,
Kyoko Yamamoto, recounted her story of living through the
attack. In Japanese
she painfully described how she, as a 15-year-old American, grew
up and worked in the doomed city. Translating for Ms. Yamamoto
was the Reverend Seichi Asahi of the Koyasan Buddhist Church.
Our
own Marielle Tsukamoto told the touching story of Sadako and
The Thousand Paper Cranes as children brought strings of
origami cranes to the stage. A short video of
Sadako’s statue in Hiroshima’s Children’s Peace
Memorial filmed by Dr. Harry Wong followed the presentation of
paper cranes.
A
statement by a World War II veteran ordered to Hiroshima just
after the bombing and currently suffering from radiation
illnesses was read.
Activist
Inga Olsen of Tri-Valley CAREs, an anti-nuclear weapons group,
urged those in attendance to renew their commitment to peace by
writing elected representatives to stop funding nuclear arms.
The final act, a rousing performance by Sacramento Taiko Dan,
brought the audience to their feet and enlivened their spirits
as they left the auditorium.
The
Florin JACL was one of twenty sponsors for the event, which is
in its nineteenth year and is co-sponsored annually by the
Chapter. The late Mary Tsukamoto, a Florin JACL pioneer, was a
founding member of this event.
One
hour of refreshments, browsing and visiting sponsors’ tables
and displays preceded the program. A number of interested people
visited the Florin JACL display and picked up literature.
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