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Japan Bomb Survivor, Tsutomu Yamaguchi, Lived Through Hiroshima And Nagasaki Atomic Attacks

JAY ALABASTER   01/ 6/10 04:18 AM ET   AP

Japan Bomb Victim
Japan Bomb Survivor Tsutomu Yamaguchi

TOKYO — Tsutomu Yamaguchi, the only person officially recognized as a survivor of both the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings at the end of World War II, has died at age 93.

Yamaguchi was in Hiroshima on a business trip for his shipbuilding company on Aug. 6, 1945, when a U.S. B-29 dropped an atomic bomb on the city. He suffered serious burns to his upper body and spent the night in the city.

He then returned to his hometown of Nagasaki, about 300 kilometers (190 miles) to the southwest, which suffered a second U.S. atomic bomb attack three days later.

On Aug. 15, 1945, Japan surrendered, ending the war.

The mayor of Nagasaki said "a precious storyteller has been lost," in a message posted on the city's Web site Wednesday. Yamaguchi died Monday morning of stomach cancer, the mass circulation Mainichi, Asahi and Yomiuri newspapers reported.

Yamaguchi was the only person to be certified by the Japanese government as having been in both cities when they were attacked, although other dual survivors have also been identified.

"My double radiation exposure is now an official government record. It can tell the younger generation the horrifying history of the atomic bombings even after I die," Yamaguchi was quoted as saying in the Mainichi newspaper last year.

In his later years, Yamaguchi gave talks about his experiences as an atomic bomb survivor and often expressed his hope that such weapons would be abolished.

He spoke at the United Nations in 2006, wrote books and songs about his experiences, and appeared in a documentary about survivors of both attacks.

Last month he was visited in the hospital by filmmaker James Cameron, director of "Titanic" and "Avatar," who is considering making a movie about the bombings, according to the Mainichi.

Immediately after the war, Yamaguchi worked as a translator for American forces in Nagasaki and later as a junior high school teacher.

Japan is the only country to have suffered atomic bomb attacks. About 140,000 people were killed in Hiroshima and 70,000 in Nagasaki.

Yamaguchi is one of about 260,000 people who survived the attacks. Some bombing survivors have developed various illnesses from radiation exposure, including cancer and liver illnesses.

Certification as an atomic bomb survivor in Japan qualifies individuals for government compensation, including monthly allowances, free medical checkups and funeral costs.

___

Associated Press researcher Junko Kanayama contributed to this report.

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05:37 PM on 01/08/2010
That man was DURABLE.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wisdo
semantics shamantics
11:40 AM on 01/07/2010
nuked twice and keep on going. How long would Mister Yamaguchi have lived had he NOT been nuked?

One can only imagine the horrors he must have witnessed.
08:24 AM on 01/07/2010
Just goes to show - as much horror as we express at the killing of our civilians, we have been willing to purposefully kill hundreds of thousands of civilians, in the worst attacks in human history. This is the truth, regardless of how we justify it to ourselves.

My grandfather was in the navy during WWII, and was sent into Hiroshima with a group of other men in the immediate aftermath of the bomb. Only later was he to find out that part of the reason his group was dispatched was simply to see what the effect would be on them. His companions from that trip have almost all died of cancer years ago.

Some of the stories he's told about his experience there are very disturbing. What is certainly more disturbing, I'm sure, is what he hasn't told us. I pray that we will all one day condemn the murder of non-combatants as unconscionable, and stop justifying it with terms like "collateral damage" or lying about it with terms like "surgical strike" or "smart bombs." I also pray that people will stop demonizing others to the point where the death of innocents becomes 'reasonable'.
07:06 PM on 01/06/2010
I don't know if this guy is one of the luckiest people on the planet or one of the least lucky.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
sviolette
Cops Pepper Spraying the Constitution!!!
12:28 AM on 01/07/2010
Anyone that lives to be 93 is pretty lucky.
08:26 AM on 01/07/2010
Word..

You know, maybe his luck is just perfectly balanced..
06:18 PM on 01/06/2010
I commend this man for sharing his story (or stories in this case). I hope this never happens again. :(
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rbenjamin
Rule 5 rules
05:01 PM on 01/06/2010
One thing I hope we can all agree on, this was one tough survivor with a story to tell.
06:13 PM on 01/06/2010
Definitely.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zero1319
They only call it class war when we fight back.
04:21 PM on 01/06/2010
R.I.P. Mr. Yamaguchi. May the suffering you endured never again be visited on any human being, anywhere.
01:32 PM on 01/06/2010
See? Radiaton! No Problem!
12:54 PM on 01/06/2010
The use of atomic weapons is regrettable. However, consider the pressure Truman faced to end the war as quickly as possible. Thousands of POWs both military and civilian had died and continued to die in Japanese military concentration camps. Most starved to death. The surviving relatives would not look kindly on a president who failed to use every means to save their loved-ones.
12:39 PM on 01/06/2010
I suspect this man soaked up just the right amount of radiation that is needed to stay healthy. Just as certain amounts of radiation will kill off bad cells such as cancer, too much radiation will cause cancer. Yep...I suspect he got just the amount he needed to keep his motor running for 93 years.
12:32 PM on 01/06/2010
No one really knew the damage that would be done by the first bomb though it was highly speculated by the scientists who helped create it. People such as Einstein pretty much knew what it would do and once he found out how it was going to be used by the military he was pissed and wanted to separate himself from the whole project. Supposedly these bombings effected Einstein for the rest of his life. The fascination of the first bomb lead to the experiment of dropping the second bomb. I agree though that all civilian targets should be off limits. Dresden was another example of an unnecesary bombing of a civilian target because bombing hospitals and civilian neigborhoods is the same mentality of Al Queida.
12:24 PM on 01/06/2010
The fact of the matter is these 2 bombs were very necessary. They saved at least 1 million American lives, and probably saved the whole Japanese population from annihilation. All you whinny babies are very ignorant.
06:56 PM on 01/06/2010
twit
08:20 PM on 01/06/2010
I agree ... mostly.

I will never understand why the US did not drop a "demonstration" bomb first.
12:20 PM on 01/06/2010
Don't forget to mention that Yamaguchi is also the great uncle of US olympic skater Christy Yamaguchi.
12:08 PM on 01/06/2010
War is hell. Ask a survivor of the rape of Nanking. The act that so many of you find repulsive quickly brought about an end to the war which was waged by a government as cruel and vile as the nazis.
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dukesman2000
We have guided missiles and misguided men
11:56 AM on 01/06/2010
Now the unconscionable act in all of this was dropping of the second bomb. There was no need for that.
12:17 PM on 01/06/2010
Of course there was a need. Japan wouldn't surrender.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ShinjiIkari
Do you understand how stupid it is to be afraid?
07:26 AM on 01/07/2010
In our stupidity we assumed Japan "would not surrender after Hiroshima." The fact was that the blast wiped out the phone & telegraph lines,which meant it took days for Tokyo to find out exactly what happened. Nagasaki, which wiped out the biggest Catholic church in Asia and the nuns who lived there, was indeed unnecessary.
12:54 AM on 01/09/2010
Sorry, not true. My mother's 2 brothers worked on the Manhattan Project, in Los Alamos, with Fermi and the gang.

It was a fast paced project, with concerns the Germans had the technology, but there was a strong revulsion among the scientists there about the 2nd bomb dropped on Nagasaki.

The guys there thought the 2nd bomb was morally unjustified because Japan was in shambles after the 1st, and was unable to organize a diplomatic reply (ie, surrender) in the short time frame before the 2nd bomb was dropped. What they saw in the classified debriefings, as to medical problems with babies in utero near the bomb site, turned them off war forever.