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The Day of The Bomb
The Day of The Bomb
The Day of The Bomb
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The Day of The Bomb

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First published in 1961 under the German title Sadako Will Leben (meaning Sadako Wants to Live), this non-fiction book by renowned Austrian children’s writer Karl Bruckner is considered his most famous work.

Telling the vivid story about a Japanese girl named Sadako Sasaki, who lived in Hiroshima and died of illnesses caused by radiation exposure following the horrific atomic bombing of the city in August 1945, the book has been translated into most major languages and has been used as material for peace education in schools around the world.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherVerdun Press
Release dateAug 9, 2016
ISBN9781787200968
The Day of The Bomb
Author

Karl Bruckner

Karl Bruckner, (January 9, 1906 - October 25, 1982) was an award-winning Austrian children’s writer. Committed to peace, international understanding, and social justice, he became one of Austria’s leading writers for young people. His stories have been translated into 22 languages.

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    I read this in middle school and the storyline still haunts me to this day. So sad and so unfair, yet so beautiful.

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The Day of The Bomb - Karl Bruckner

This edition is published by PICKLE PARTNERS PUBLISHING—www.pp-publishing.com

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Text originally published in 1962 under the same title.

© Pickle Partners Publishing 2016, all rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted by any means, electrical, mechanical or otherwise without the written permission of the copyright holder.

Publisher’s Note

Although in most cases we have retained the Author’s original spelling and grammar to authentically reproduce the work of the Author and the original intent of such material, some additional notes and clarifications have been added for the modern reader’s benefit.

We have also made every effort to include all maps and illustrations of the original edition the limitations of formatting do not allow of including larger maps, we will upload as many of these maps as possible.

THE DAY OF THE BOMB

BY

KARL BRUCKNER

Translated by Frances Lobb

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Contents

TABLE OF CONTENTS 3

INTRODUCTION 4

PART ONE 5

CHAPTER ONE 5

CHAPTER TWO 10

CHAPTER THREE 21

CHAPTER FOUR 28

CHAPTER FIVE 35

CHAPTER SIX 41

CHAPTER SEVEN 51

CHAPTER EIGHT 57

CHAPTER NINE 65

CHAPTER TEN 67

PART TWO 75

CHAPTER ELEVEN 75

CHAPTER TWELVE 80

CHAPTER THIRTEEN 87

CHAPTER FOURTEEN 95

CHAPTER FIFTEEN 101

CHAPTER SIXTEEN 105

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN 113

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN 121

IN-MEMORIAM 125

REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 126

INTRODUCTION

THE DAY OF THE BOMB was a day which was to change the lives of all mankind, not just of Sadako.

Sadako is a little girl who lives with her parents and elder brother in wartime Hiroshima. She is a thin little girl because she doesn’t get enough to eat, but she has a chubby face because she is still very young.

On August 6th, 1945, Sadako and her brother go to join the queue for food outside the Ministry. But Sadako is too weak to wait for their ration and her brother decides to carry her home. On the way he stops to bathe while Sadako sleeps on the lakeside.

Just as he dives into the lake the atom-bomb explodes over the town.

Sadako and her family survive the dropping of the bomb and the subsequent rigours of life in a post-war world—the black market, the shortages, the bitter competition. The pleasures and the tragedy of life in Japan at this time are seen here through the eyes of the young girl who wins local fame for her prowess in a bicycle relay race, only to find that even she cannot cycle fast enough to-escape from the events of the past.

Her story—and through it the story of mankind—is told with the vivid detail of a colour, film and the sensitivity of a human documentary. It is an account without bitterness and without horror of an event which changed the course of history.

PART ONE

CHAPTER ONE

ON the morning of July 20th, 1945, the following events took place.

From the air above the shimmering Inland Sea came a faint droning. A Japanese observer on the coast of the island of Shikoku signalled to Defence Headquarters for Southern Japan, stationed at the ancient castle in Hiroshima: Enemy bomber approaching.

Some minutes later a second signal followed it. Enemy bomber identified as reconnaissance plane.

Defence Headquarters sounded no air raid warning for the town, so as not to interrupt work in the armament factories unnecessarily. Enemy planes had flown over Hiroshima several times lately without dropping bombs.

* * * * *

On the banks of one of the six branches of the River Ota, the crippled boat-builder, Kenji Nishioka, was fishing, seated on a stone projecting from the muddy bank. Kenji let the water ripple round his naked feet. Its coolness eased the burning in his swollen ankles. Last night the pain had been worse than ever. He looked thoughtfully at his ailing limbs. Was it the heat of summer that made his ankles swell? Or was it, as the old woman who lived next door to him maintained, that all evils were due to the war? There might be something in what old Kumakichi said. It was certainly due to the war that for the past few months he, Kenji, had only been getting as much rice every third day as he had formerly eaten in one. The local government officials probably thought of all old people as useless mouths, because they gave them so very little food. Younger people didn’t respect their elders anymore. Yes, indeed, war corrupted morals. If it didn’t end soon, old people would starve.

Gloomily Kenji hauled in his line and stuck a fresh bait on his hook. He had been sitting here since early morning without a nibble. If he had still owned his good boat he could have gone out on the water to fish. But this boat had been commandeered for the Navy in the very first year of the war. So had all the ship’s timber that he had accumulated in the course of the years when he was still building heavy fishing smacks as well as light pleasure craft.

From some indefinable direction came a droning. The noise increased, faded, and increased again.

Kenji Nishioka looked skywards, blinking. The sun dazzled him. The slit eyes in his round full moon of a face now looked mere streaks painted in with Indian ink. He attempted to discover the source of the noise. Now he tilted his head so far back that his flat straw hat slid off his bald head and fell in the mud. This hat had formerly served as headgear to a rickshaw coolie, who, on being called up, had left it with his creditor, Nishioka, as a pledge for some small loan. At that time the hat had been nearly new. Now it was tattered and shapeless. All the same, it was Kenji’s favourite headgear, and he therefore carefully wiped off the mud which clung to it. He was so busily engaged in doing this that he forgot what he had previously been looking for in the sky. As an approaching drone reminded him of it again, the noise was drowned by the sudden pounding of one of the many guns from the Mitsubishi shipyard on the opposite bank. A dirty grey puff of smoke shot up into the air. Kenji Nishioka ceased to worry about the droning in the sky.

* * * * *

Along the embankment marched a company of soldiers, singing. Only one, the last on the left, raised his eyes heavenwards. He saw an aeroplane high over the water. To him it looked a mere speck. An enemy bomber, said the soldier to his neighbour, gesturing furtively in the appropriate direction. His comrade gave the aeroplane a fleeting glance. Then he whistled through his teeth to show how remote he reckoned the danger to be.

The young officer leading the company to the barracks square turned round unexpectedly. Sternly he ran his eyes over the ranks of the soldiers. None of them, as far as he could see, was looking in the direction of the bomber. That was a good thing. A soldier should despise danger. Even that old man down there on the river bank was peacefully wiping his hat clean rather than honouring the bomber in the sky with any attention. The old man was setting a good example.

* * * * *

By the side of the road, ten-year-old Shigeo Sasaki tried to keep step with the marching soldiers. This was not easy, for Shigeo was walking on stilts. Two feet above ground-level, he was balancing himself on foot-rests screwed into poles taller than a man’s height. Shigeo too heard the drone of an engine in the sky, but he did not spare the time to look up. He was more interested in trying to impress the soldiers. Behind him trotted his four-year-old sister, Sadako. She was crying because she could not keep up with her big brother. At last the chubby-faced child stood still and began to scream shrilly, stamping her feet on the ground. Her tiny, high-heeled wooden clogs rattled on the pavement like a burst of kettledrums. She held out her arms in front of her as if she would have liked to pull Shigeo off his stilts. The latter plodded calmly on, smiling at the soldiers in the hope of attracting admiration, until he stumbled and had to jump down. Some of the soldiers grinned then, amused. Shigeo pretended that he had only jumped down for his sister’s sake, and he ran back. Putting his arms round the little girl, he lifted her up and spun round with her in a circle, to pacify her. But she was not to be consoled. Shigeo grew angry. He pointed to the aeroplane in the sky. Do you see that big bumble-bee up there? It will come right down and sting you if you are not quiet.

The child squinted upwards, grew quiet and stuck her finger in her mouth. To her, the aeroplane high up there really did seem a spiteful bumble-bee.

* * * * *

For the third and last time Kenji Nishioka, the boat-builder, tried to see the aeroplane in the blue sky. Now he had found it. It was just hovering over the centre of the town. Kenji thought: If that airman is one of the enemy he must be a brave man. He has flown to us across the great ocean. He changed the bait on his hook and shook his head reflectively. Then he went on to think: It is an enemy. Our planes don’t make so much noise. It is probably a reconnaissance plane. Otherwise the air raid warning would have sounded. He felt a twitch at his line and drew it in, but the fish had not bitten. Kenji continued to reflect. Even so, I wouldn’t have run to the air raid shelter. I’ve never done anyone any harm, so why should a stranger want to kill me?

* * * * *

The pilot of the plane was Captain Lawrence A. Kennan. He had made many successful reconnaissance flights and had been decorated more than once. Before the war he had been Managing Director of a firm in Detroit that dealt with the construction of steel-and-concrete bridges. He had loved his job. Building bridges seemed to him a way of bringing people closer to one another. His business trips had taken him to South America, to Australia, and even to India and the Philippines. In those days the world had seemed to him an unimaginable miracle at which he marvelled whenever he had a moment to do so. The war, however, seldom left him time enough to marvel at the beauties of nature. Except for two short periods of leave, he had been on active service uninterruptedly ever since the conclusion of his observer’s training course, constantly threatened by enemy planes and by anti-aircraft defences from the ground. Even on the picturesque tropical islands over which he had flown, death was always lurking. This flight over the Japanese islands was his twelfth in eighteen days. At early dawn he had set out with a crew of six from the Pacific island of Tinian in the Marianas. It was a flight of more than 2,500 miles there and back. Now he was circling five thousand feet above his objective—Hiroshima. He knew that the observer in the tail of the plane was now photographing the town.

Captain Kennan permitted himself a downward glance. He saw the delta of the River Ota and the six islands on which Hiroshima was built. The view of the city impressed him greatly. A holiday in Japan in time of peace would be a marvellous experience, he thought. He would bring Liddy, his wife, and Evelyn and Bud, the children, and with them he would visit all the cities over which he had made reconnaissance flights during the war. When would this war be over? Would it go on for months still? Or for years?

Years?

Impossible. The enemy’s might in the Pacific had been destroyed. The Japanese had been forced to abandon all the regions they had occupied; they had lost their Navy and had withdrawn to their island realm. There, it is true, they were still formidable opponents. A sea invasion could be carried out only at cost of appalling losses. It was better not to think of such slaughter. He must not think of it! Otherwise he would see those dead bodies once more, those seas of flame, that hell! No. He must blot out all thought.

Too late.

He was in its grip already.

The muscles in Kennan’s jaw stiffened, his hands clenched. He writhed as if in pain.

During the course of the war he had seen so much meaningless destruction, lived through so many ghastly atrocities that on certain nights, tormented by horrible dreams, he would cry out, awaken, and rush out into the night still filled with horror. When he finally came to himself, either because he stumbled, ran into some obstacle or was shouted at by a sentry, he always felt what he had gone through in the war must have been a dream too. He was certainly no longer the healthy, cheerful Lawrence A. Kennan who had enthusiastically enrolled as a pilot at the beginning of the war. He was suffering from a strange disease. Several times, during flights in the past weeks, whenever he thought of the events of the war, he had been seized with an overwhelming hatred for his plane. At such times he would clutch the control column in a wild grasp, strain at his safety belt and experience a violent longing to tear everything to bits, to destroy everything. When he had once overcome such a fit, which lasted only a few seconds, he would feel as exhausted as if he had just run a gruelling race. After each attack he had resolved to talk to the medical officer about it, but he never carried out his intention. He did not want his comrades to think him a cowardly hypocrite or a shirker. To his mind, each one had to bear his own share of suffering in this war—bear it to the end, whether sweet or bitter.

The co-pilot was called George Hawkins. He was highly popular with the squadron on account of his talents as an actor. He came from Boston, where he had been a crane-driver in the docks. All his life this fair-haired lad of twenty-eight with the baby-blue eyes had dreamed of becoming a famous actor. Owing, however, to a slight vocal defect—his voice was too hoarse—the way to the footlights had been barred to him. An astonishing memory enabled him to recite major rôles from memory. Shakespeare was his favourite playwright. Throughout every flight Hawkins’s thoughts were busy with Shakespearian heroes, and sometimes he was Othello, sometimes King Lear, sometimes Hamlet or Caesar. Meanwhile, as reliably as a machine, he fulfilled his duties as co-pilot, watched the instruments attentively and kept up communications without ever forgetting the point at which he had been interrupted in his rôle. If the plane were shot down, he would probably declaim a speech from one of Shakespeare’s tragedies while still hanging from his parachute.

William Sharp, the curly-headed observer, was working the built-in camera with all the assurance of a skilled professional. Before the war, despite his youth, he had been reckoned an expert in the production of optical glass. In the Pittsburgh factory in which he had been employed, he had earned a lot of dollars, but the money had always slipped through his fingers. He loved gambling, was passionately fond of poker, and loathed all forms of compulsion. As an airman, he was obliged to conform to countless regulations, and he therefore also hated any superior who prevented him from ignoring these regulations. He cared for his adored camera, however, with the zeal of a lover. What he photographed was a matter of indifference to him. Tropical landscapes, islands, cities or mountains were of no interest to him. He merely knew that he was now flying over a Japanese port called Hiroshima. For all he cared, it might just as well have been called Honolulu or Singapore. Now that he had finished his task, he occupied himself in planning how to persuade his companions to play poker with him that evening in camp on the island of Tinian. At the moment he had a great longing for a cigarette. He licked his lips voluptuously and glanced at Sam Miller, the air mechanic. That stiff old stick was a Regular—he had served in the Air Force even before the war. Taciturn, surly fellow that he was, he would shop his own brother if he caught him smoking on duty.

As substitute for a cigarette Sharp pulled out a piece of chewing gum from his pocket and bit grimly into the sticky mass. To pass the time, he gazed through the viewer and watched the town gliding away beneath him. The sea appeared. The flight back to Tinian had begun. He was glad of that. The chances of playing a game of poker grew better every minute. It was to be hoped that no enemy aircraft would imperil this chance. The Japanese were fanatically reckless. It was incredible that they hadn’t harassed this reconnaissance plane. Perhaps it hadn’t seemed worth the trouble to them. Perhaps it hadn’t seemed worthwhile to bother about a single plane. If only they had known why this handsome, four-engined machine had been circling over the town they would have strained every nerve to bring it down. Today’s photographs of Hiroshima were certainly wanted for a definite purpose. Something quite out of the ordinary seemed to be brewing in Tinian. For the last two days Staff Command had been hectically active. Special courier planes flew back and forth. The senior officers whispered to one another. If that didn’t mean that something out of the ordinary was hatching, Observer William Sharp would eat his parachute on the spot.

O’Hagerty, the air-gunner, scanned the horizon with the keenest attention. He had switched off his thoughts rather as one switches off an electric motor. Only after much practice had he succeeded in doing this. During a number of operational flights he had practised thinking of nothing, merely looking. Now he could

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