The horror of the Hiroshima bombing can be partly experienced from the book Hiroshima by John Hersey. This book …show more content…
His wife lives in Osaka. He is known to be a healthy, convivial and calm (10) man who enjoyed studying foreign languages amongst which include English, German and Esperanto. When the bomb struck Hiroshima, Fujii found himself in Kyo river and clinic too toppled into the water too. When the bomb struck, Dr. Fujii was seriously injured and couldn’t offer any help to other victims. In the aftermath, Dr. Fujii opened a new clinic in 1948 in Hiroshima. This time, it was smaller with only half a dozen beds for patients . Just as before the attach, he believed in never working too hard and his hobbies included dancing, photography, played Mah-jongg and golf . Years later, he travelled to the United States to help the hibakusha (victims of Hiroshima) who needed surgery and treatment. While in the States, he suffered a sudden unknown illness and was unconscious for eleven years before he died in …show more content…
Hatsuyo Nakamura is a widow who lived an ordinary and simple life of a single mother. She had three children whom she supported through sewing, a job she took after the death of her husband mainly to fend for her three children. Even before the bombing, Mrs. Nakamura already had many troubles in her life before the bombing. She was always concerned about her fatherless children, she felt pity for the whole people of Hiroshima because of the anxiety that loomed Hiroshima and for her neighbor who was taking down his house. She was alone with the children when the bomb struck. When the bomb struck, Mrs. Nakamura saw white flash and she suddenly found herself buried in debris . Although she struggled, she fortunately managed to save her three children unhurt from the debris of the bomb. She fell ill a week after and at the same time found out that her family (mother, brother and elder sister) who lived in Kabe were all dead. She was depressed even more. Mrs. Nakamura escaped the bombing, but she and her children suffered serious illness due to poisoning by radiation from the bomb. In the aftermath, she continued to cater for her kids by sewing, doing odd jobs like cleaning, laundry and washing dishes for neighbors . Her three children all grew and married. She retired at 55 years after working for thirteen years at Suyama Chemical after, which, she took dance classes. Due to the changing economic and political climate in Japan, Mrs. Nakamura was able to receive a widow’s