Nagasaki Peace Park Explained

Monument Name:Nagasaki Peace Park
Native Name:Japanese: 長崎平和公園
Location:Nagasaki, Japan
Designer:Seibo Kitamura
Type:International Memorial Park
Open:April 1, 1955
Dedicated To:Victims of the atomic bomb explosion on August 9, 1945
Coordinates:32.7757°N 129.8632°W

Nagasaki Peace Park is a park located in Nagasaki, Japan, commemorating the atomic bombing of the city on August 9, 1945 during World War II. It is next to the Atomic Bomb Museum and near the Peace Memorial Hall.

History

Established in 1955, and near to the hypocenter of the explosion, remnants of a concrete wall of Urakami Cathedral can still be seen. Urakami Cathedral was the grandest church in east Asia at the time. At the park's north end is the 10-meter-tall Peace Statue created by sculptor Seibo Kitamura of Nagasaki Prefecture. The statue's right hand points to the threat of nuclear weapons while the extended left hand symbolizes eternal peace. The mild face symbolizes divine grace and the gently closed eyes offer a prayer for the repose of the bomb victims' souls. The folded right leg and extended left leg signify both meditation and the initiative to stand up and rescue the people of the world. The statue represents a mixture of western and eastern art, religion, and ideology. Installed in front of the statue is a black marble vault containing the names of the atomic bomb victims and survivors who died in subsequent years.

A plaque by the Peace Statue is titled Words from the Sculptor and reads:

Plaque

A plaque at the nearby hypocenter gives the following account and statistics of the damage caused that day.

DAMAGE CAUSED BY THE ATOMIC BOMB EXPLOSION
1. Leveled Area: 6.7 million square meters (2.59 square miles)
2. Damaged Houses:
Completely burned: 11,574
Completely destroyed: 1,326
Badly damaged: 5,509
Total structures damaged: 18,409
3. Casualties:
Killed: 73,884
Injured: 74,909
Total: 148,793
(Large numbers of people have died in the following years from the effects of radioactive poisoning.)

Peace Memorial Ceremony

Every year, on 9 August, the anniversary of the atomic bombing, a Peace Memorial Ceremony is held in front of the statue and the Mayor of Nagasaki delivers a Peace Declaration to the World.[1]

At the south end of the park is a "Fountain of Peace". This was constructed in August, 1969, as a prayer for the repose of the souls of the many atomic bomb victims who died searching for water, and as a dedication to world peace. Lines from a poem by a girl named Sachiko Yamaguchi, who was nine at the time of the bombing, are carved on a black stone plaque in front of the fountain. It reads: "I was thirsty beyond endurance. There was something oily on the surface of the water, but I wanted water so badly that I drank it just as it was."

In 2024, on the eve of the 79th anniversary of the bombing, ambassadors from all members of the G7 as well as the European Union announced that they will be skipping the ceremony due to Israel's exclusion, instead sending representatives, citing fears of politicization of the ceremony in light of the ongoing Israel–Hamas war.[2] [3] The Mayor of Nagasaki City, Shiro Suzuki, justified his decision to exclude Israel (as well as Russia and Belarus, who are involved in the invasion of Ukraine) in an interview with the Mainichi Shimbun stating that "something might happen if we invite participants of a conflict where the ceremony cannot proceed peacefully and solemnly".[4] This was in contrast to Hiroshima City which had invited the Israeli Ambassador to its ceremony held three days prior.[5] [6]

Of the G7 members' ambassadors that skipped the 2024 ceremony, the British and American ambassadors, together with the Israeli Ambassador, attended a memorial service on that day held at Zojoji in Tokyo.[7]

Peace Symbols Zone

In 1978 the city of Nagasaki established a "Peace Symbols Zone" on both sides of the park and invited donations of monuments from countries round the world. The following monuments can be seen in the park:

The Monument for Korean Atomic Victims is located in Nagasaki Peace Park in Nagasaki, Japan. At the time of the atomic bombing in Nagasaki, there were many people of nationalities other than Japanese that were living in the area. There were an estimated 12,000 to 14,000 Koreans living in Nagasaki during the bombing. It is believed that up to 2,000 of them died because of the atomic bomb. At the time, many of those Koreans were being used as forced labor as a part of the Japanese war effort. This monument commemorates the Korean victims and serves as a message asking for peace in the world, an abolition of nuclear weapons, and a peaceful reunification of the Korean nation. The Monument for Korean Atomic Victims was unveiled on August 9, 1979.

Photos

In film

The park was shown in the 1991 Akira Kurosawa film Rhapsody in August, in which a Japanese child points out that there is no sculpture in the Peace Symbols Zone from the United States.[9] "Constellation Earth" was donated in 1992, a year after the film's release, after this omission was noted by St. Paul mayor James Schiebel during a trip to Nagasaki in 1990.[10]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nagasaki Places of Interest: Peace Park . 2010-10-20 . 2014-03-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140301004904/http://www.at-nagasaki.jp/foreign/english/spot/002.html . dead .
  2. Web site: Western ambassadors pull out of Nagasaki memorial after Israel not invited .
  3. Web site: 2024-08-09 . G7とEUは大使欠席 仏公使「不招待残念」 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240810003302/https://www.tokyo-np.co.jp/article/346531 . 2024-08-10 . 2024-08-10 . . ja.
  4. Web site: Ogata . Yuna . Higuchi . Takehiro . 2024-08-08 . 長崎市長「むしろ紛争当事国を呼ぶべきだ」 平和祈念式典で一問一答 . 2024-08-10 . Mainichi Shimbun . ja.
  5. Web site: 2024-07-12 . 平和記念式典にイスラエル招待 パレスチナ代表部が市を非難 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240802100246/https://www3.nhk.or.jp/hiroshima-news/20240712/4000026389.html . 2024-08-02 . 2024-08-10 . NHK NEWS WEB . ja.
  6. Web site: Haruna . Takagi . Yaoi . Kensuke . 2024-08-06 . ロシアを招かず、イスラエルは招いた広島の平和式典 その理由と評価 . subscription . https://web.archive.org/web/20240807102541/https://mainichi.jp/articles/20240806/k00/00m/040/310000c . 2024-08-07 . 2024-08-10 . . ja.
  7. Web site: 2024-08-09 . US, UK, Israeli envoys attend memorial in Tokyo for Nagasaki atomic bomb victims . https://web.archive.org/web/20240810004245/https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20240809_21/ . 2024-08-10 . 2024-08-10 . NHK WORLD . en.
  8. Joy of Life (1975) http://www.janhana.com/statues/joy-of-life/ accessed 28 January 2009
  9. Web site: Kurosawa's 30 [by Lewis Saul] ]. 2023-06-04 . The Best American Poetry.
  10. Web site: Timeline of SPNSCC History . 2023-06-04 . Saint Paul - Nagasaki Sister City Committee . en-US.