Friday, January 30, 2015

Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park

The site of the A-Bomb drop was redesigned as a peace memorial covering about 4.5 square miles.
Children's Peace Monument
The statue is based on a young girl suffering from the radiation of the atomic bomb. She believed if she folded 1,000 paper cranes she would be healed, but sadly passed away.

The display cases around the monument are filled with chains of origami cranes continuously sent from around the world to be placed at the site in honor of peace.
Many are designed into pictures.



At the Peace Bell, we watched a couple of groups say a prayer for peace, then ring the bell.
I decided to give it a try, too!


We had noticed a number of groups of school children around the memorial, then this group came up to us. They had a list of questions to ask in order to practice their English!

Looking from the Peace Flame over the Pond of Peace towards the Memorial Cenotaph (empty tomb) and Peace Memorial Museum.
Closeup of the flame with the museum in the background

View from the cenotaph to the dome


At the entrance of the underground Hall of Remembrance, is a clock-face frozen at 8:15 (the time the bomb went off) surrounded by rubble from the devastation. Inside the hall, among other displays, is the victims' information area, a list of victims of the blast.

On the screen above, it shows there are 18922 victims listed as of the date of our visit and is updated as necessary. Using the touch screen, a visitor is able to look up names using any of four languages. The screen below scrolls through pictures and names of the victims. The pictures of babies brought extra tears to my eyes..... 
This cross-section of strata at the exit of the hall shows the layer of rubble. 

Our next stop was the Memorial Museum. It was the only site with a paid entry fee, but we decided 50 cents each would not break the bank! Photos were not allowed in the museum, but I probably couldn't have taken a decent photo anyway, seeing as, as Rodney puts it, we cried our way through it!
 Thankfully, the exit hallway was photo friendly because the view down the plaza is stunning!!

From here we began our trek to the Hiroshima Castle Tower...

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