By Reginald Johnson
NEW HAVEN --- More than 78 years ago this month, the United States
committed one of the most heinous acts of violence in human history.
Two atomic bombs were
dropped by American planes on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, killing
over 200,000 people, mostly civilians. Many people were killed instantaneously,
while others died slowly over the next few weeks from severe radiation illness.
The savage bombing
was justified by American officials with the claim that it hastened the end of
World War II by forcing Japan to surrender quickly and avoided an invasion of
Japan, which could have cost a large number of American and Japanese casualties.
But historians have since
the countered that idea, saying that Japan was about to surrender anyway. They
maintain that the real reason for the bombing was that the United States wanted
to show the Soviet Union it had the bomb, thus giving America a geopolitical
edge in the expected rivalry with Russia after the war.
Memorials have been
held every year since 1945 in Japan and around the world to remember the
victims of the bombings. The memorials and vigils have also been occasions when
people have spoken out against nuclear weapons and urged that all nations join
together to ban the bomb once and for all.
As they have done in
recent years, peace activists and city officials here came together for two
vigils, one for Hiroshima on New Haven Green last Sunday and the other for
Nagasaki at the Amistad Statue on Wednesday.
The Nagasaki
memorial saw a number of speakers, including Joelle Fishman, chairperson of the
New Haven Peace Commision (which is part of the city government), Jim Pandaru,
of Veterans for Peace, Paula Panzarella, reading poetry and Hank Bolden, a
survivor of atomic bomb testing.
“We mourn those killed, whose memory will never fade.
“We remember the
terrible destruction wrought upon the city and Hiroshima.
“We honor the unrelenting strength and resilience of the
people of Nagasaki to rebuild.
“We must never again allow such devastation to occur.
“Despite the terrible lessons of 1945, humanity now
confronts a new arms race.
“Nuclear weapons are being used as tools of coercion.
“Weapon systems are being upgraded, and placed at the center
of national security strategies, making these devices of death faster, more
accurate and stealthier.
“All this at a moment when division and mistrust are pulling
countries and regions apart.
“The risk of nuclear catastrophe is now at the highest level
since the Cold War.
“In the face of these threats, the global community must
speak as one.
“Any use of nuclear weapons is unacceptable.
“We will not sit idly by as nuclear armed states race to
create even more dangerous weapons.”
Bolden, 86, told
of his experiences as a soldier who survived the US Army’s atomic bomb testing in
Nevada in the 1950s. Bolden said he and his fellow GIs were never told ahead of
time that they were going to be put in a location that was within 3 miles of an
atomic bomb test.
Bolden, who is
black, said the Army was trying to determine what effect the test would have on
soldiers placed near an atomic detonation site.
“I was a guinea pig. They put us in a predetermined path of what they knew was the direction of the fallout," he said.
Bolden has battled three different types of cancers in his
life, which he thinks were caused by radiation fallout. He is now trying to
let as many people know as possible what happened to him and emphasize that their government at times can be cruel and cynical in how they treat
people when they want to achieve some kind of secret objective.
Henry Lowendorf, president of the Greater New Haven Peace Council, which helped organize the vigil, said he and others are going to movie theaters showing the film "Oppenheimer" to hand out leaflets to patrons urging that they call on their congressmembers to end the nuclear arms race and push for a diplomatic settlement to end the Ukraine War.
The movie tells the story of J. Robert Oppenheimer, who developed the atomic bomb for the United States.
"This movie, one, raises the issue of the horror of the atomic bomb, does it in a biographical format of J. Robert Oppenheimer, but it takes that biography and explores what the atomic bomb means and what it does," Lowendorf said.
"And we now live in an era now when that is hidden from everybody, censored and not talked about," he said. "And we're facing right now two nuclear weapons powers that are fighting a war against each other, right. And both of them have said using nuclear weapons is not off the table --- both Russia and the United States."
He added, "and this war is a prelude to a war on China which the United States is preparing us for. So we have this perpetual war. If we don't explode ourselves with a nuclear blast, there will be another war and this is simply promoting the wealth of the military-industrial complex and the militarized society we live in and face everyday."
For more information on the peace council's work, email to grnhpeacecouncil@gmail.com