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DESCRIPTION:A Virtual Remembrance: 75 Years After the Atomic Bombings\n\nSunday, August 
 9, 2020 at 4:00 PM – 6:00 PM PDT\n\nLivestreams: 
 https://www.facebook.com/nichibei/  & 
 https://www.nichibei.org/\n\nPresented by:\n--Nichi Bei Foundation San 
 Francisco \n--Friends of Hibakusha\n--Japanese American Religious 
 Federation of San Francisco\n\nThis commoration event is supported by the 
 Committee of Atomic Bomb Survivors \nin the U.S.A., National Japanese 
 American Historical Society, Tsuru for Solidarity, \nand the Asian American 
 Jazz Orchestra. 
 \n___________________________________________________________\n\nTo 
 commemorate the 75th anniversary of the atomic bombings of the Japanese 
 cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki during World War II, the first nuclear 
 destruction of a civilian population in the world, the Nichi Bei Foundation 
 and Friends of Hibakusha will present \n“A Virtual Remembrance: 75 Years 
 After the Atomic Bombings” on Nagaski Day, Sunday, \nAug. 9, 2020, 4 
 p.m., on the Nichi Bei Foundation YouTube and Facebook channels. \n\nThe 
 world’s first atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945, and 
 another on Nagasaki three days later on Aug. 9, 1945,  resulted in the 
 deaths of an estimated 214,000 people by the end of that year, including 
 140,000 in Hiroshima and 74,000 in Nagasaki.\n\n“This year may mark the 
 last major milestone many hibakusha, or atomic bomb survivors, share with 
 the world, emphasizing their urgent calls for peace,” said Kenji G. 
 Taguma, president of the Nichi Bei Foundation. “This event is dedicated 
 to their lifelong struggle to persevere out of the ashes of nuclear 
 destruction, and their commitment to teach the world about the evils of 
 such weapons of mass devastation.”\n\nThe event will include an 
 Interfaith Ceremony led by the Japanese American Religious Federation of 
 San Francisco, a Litany of Water Ceremony, and short films about the atomic 
 bombings. \n\nCentral to the event are three exclusive interviews with 
 atomic bomb survivors, or "hibakusha". The event will also include the 
 participation of descendants of hibakusha.\n\n• Seiko Fujimoto, a 
 hibakusha (atomic bomb survivor) from Hiroshima, who was only three years 
 old when the atomic bomb took the lives of her relatives, leaving her and 
 her one-year-old brother alone in the immediate aftermath.\n\n• Jack 
 Dairiki, a hibakusha from Hiroshima, who was 14 years old when a delayed 
 train helped to save him from entering the epicenter, sparing his 
 life.\n\n• Rev. Nobuaki Hanaoka, a retired United Methodist minister and 
 hibakusha from Nagasaki, who was only eight months old when the atomic bomb 
 hit. The effects of the bomb would go on to claim the lives of three 
 immediate family members, including his mother, and inspire a life-long 
 commitment to speak against nuclear proliferation.\n\n“We thought it was 
 important to give our beloved hibakusha a voice,” said Geri Handa, of the 
 Friends of Hibakusha. “It is our hope that their stories of painful loss 
 and grief will help to remind the world of the urgent need for peace, 
 particularly in these tense 
 times.”\n___________________________________________________________\n\nFILM 
 SCREENINGS\n\nThe event will incorporate three short films, which reflects 
 upon the nuclear disaster from different lenses: \n\n"Witness to Hiroshima" 
 (2008, 16 min.), a film by Kathy Sloane.\n \nIn “Witness to Hiroshima,” 
 Japanese citizen Keiji Tsuchiya, using 12 watercolors he painted in 2001, 
 recounts his experiences in Hiroshima as a 17-year-old soldier, hours after 
 the atom bomb blast. Through the use of animated still photographs and Mr. 
 Tsuchiya's narrative, the film depicts the horrors Tsuchiya witnessed, and 
 the aid he and others offered to the burned and dying victims they 
 encountered. Out of such horror the film segues into the beautiful story of 
 how and why Mr. Tsuchiya came to devote his life to preserving the life of 
 the horseshoe crab.\n\n▪▪▪▪▪▪▪▪▪▪▪▪\n\n"Takashi 
 Tanemori  — The World I Want To Live In" (2016, 3:38 min.) by Jason 
 Cordis.\n\n“Takashi Tanemori — The World I Want to Live In” explores 
 the 40-year struggle of Takashi Tanemori — a Hiroshima bombing survivor 
 and Baptist preacher — to forgive Americans for the atomic bombing that 
 flattened Hiroshima and killed tens of thousands of people, including six 
 members of his family. The film by Jason Cordis, then a student at Salesian 
 College Preparatory high school in Richmond, Calif., was one of 15 
 finalists of the White House Student Film 
 Festival.\n\n▪▪▪▪▪▪▪▪▪▪▪▪\n\nThe World Premiere of 
 "Ashes of Nagasaki" (2020, 15:27) by Emiko Omori.\n\n“Ashes of 
 Nagasaki,” by acclaimed Bay Area filmmaker Emiko Omori — winner of the 
 Sundance Audience Award and National Emmy for “Rabbit in the Moon” — 
 follows Jan Chozen Bays of the Great Vow Zen Monastery in Oregon as she 
 leads a group of Americans on a pilgrimage to Hiroshima and Nagasaki on the 
 60th anniversary of the atomic bombings in 2005. The group offered some 
 500,000 Jizo prayer flags to honor those who perished in the atomic 
 bombings.\n___________________________________________________________\n\nABOUT: 
 Nichi Bei Foundation of San Francisco\n\n1832 Buchanan St, Ste 207, San 
 Francisco, CA\n\nThe Nichi Bei Foundation is an educational and charitable 
 nonprofit organization dedicated to keeping the Japanese American community 
 connected, informed and empowered – primarily through a community 
 newspaper (Nichi Bei Weekly) and Website (https://www.nichibei.org/) as 
 well as educational programming.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/08/05/18835684.php
SUMMARY:A Virtual Remembrance: 75 Years After the Atomic Bombings hosted by Nichi Bei SF
LOCATION:Online via livestream
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/08/05/18835684.php
DTSTART:20200809T230000Z
DTEND:20200810T010000Z
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