Asperger's Diary

Life through the lens of Asperger's Syndrome.
Lynne Soraya is the nom de plume for a writer with Asperger's Syndrome. See full bio

Hiroshima and Nagasaki: A Failure of Empathy

Remembering the Destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki

HiroshimaIn any conversation about autism, the word empathy comes up repeatedly.  The process of learning about autism, and how to survive in the world, has led to an examination of empathy - what it is, what it isn't, and examples of it in practice.  However, my examinations also bring me smack up against humanity's mass failures of empathy - wartime atrocities such as the holocaust, and crimes of cruelty such as murder and rape.

This month marked the 63rd anniversary of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Like most Americans, I grew up knowing that "the bomb" had been dropped on these cities, ending World War II, but, for me, that knowledge was just sentences on a page.  I did not truly grasp of the actual nature of the event.

Shohei Imamura's Black RainMy first real appreciation of the true horror of the bombing, came when, in the course of my language studies, I rented Shohei Imamura's movie Kuroi Ame (Black Rain).  The images shown were nothing like I even could conceive - a mother cradling her blackened baby, a young boy so terribly burned that he must beg his brother to recognize him, and relatives weeping because they cannot free their children from the rubble. 

Through it, I also learned of the painful social cost to the hibakusha  (the survivors of the bomb), who faced discrimination and ostracism from their own people.  The subject of widespread ignorance regarding the effects of the bomb, they were treated as "untouchables." They struggled to find jobs, marry, or simply to be accepted in society.

More recently, I viewed Stephen Okazaki's award winning documentary, "White Light, Black Rain: The Destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki."  While Kuroi Ame was disturbing, I found the accounts in Okazaki's film appalling.   With Imamura's film, there was always the consoling thought that, while based in truth, it was fiction. 

HBO Documentary White Light, Black Rain, By Stephen OkazakiNot so with White Light Black Rain, a documentary.  The accounts of these people were real, and absolutely unthinkable.  Most affecting to me was that, at the time of the blast, all but a few of these individuals were children.  Children who suffered through suffering I cannot even imagine. 

The interviewees talk about their experiences, where they were when the bomb hit, and what they saw.

(Warning - these stories are disturbing.)

Sakue Shimohira was 10 years old.  When the bomb hit, she and her sister thrown through their home and passed out.  When they awakened, they called for their mother.  No one answered.  In the yard they found her, able only to identify her by her gold tooth.  Before their eyes, her body disintegrated into ash.  Her sister, who contracted radiation sickness, later committed suicide by stepping in front of a train.

Keiji Nakazawa was 6 years old, lost his father, sister and younger brother when their home collapsed and burned in the wake of the bombing.  His sister was killed immediately, but he and his mother had to endure the screams of his 4 your old brother, as he burned to death inside the house.  He later published an account of his experience in a comic book series called "Barefoot Gen."

The terrible stories go on and on. The emotional strength it must have taken to survive the terror of the events the survivors recall is staggering to me.  Many were subjected to unbearable pain through disfiguring burns and injuries.  Others are tormented by grief and survivor's guilt. Their stories are made all the more powerful and disturbing through historical footage of the aftermath which, in several cases, includes footage of the interviewees themselves.

As Okazaki states, "I realized that surviving is not just about physically surviving. It's more about spiritually surviving. I've met people who were not physically hurt by the bomb, but who were really destroyed by what they went through.

When you do a film like this, you're getting the story of the people who've survived in all ways, not just physically. I mean, there are people in the film who live in constant pain. One of the survivors in the film had to take breaks every couple of hours so she could rest and take her morphine."

The Enola GaySeveral members of the American crew who conducted the mission to drop the bomb were also interviewed.  They speak with focus of their mission, but distance from what was happening on the ground.   One states, "Our endeavor in using these bombs was to win the war.  End the war as soon as possible and win the war.  No sympathy, no, uh, regrets."  Another states, "It had worked as designed, but it had done what war does, it destroys people."

Obviously, we had scientists who understood, in theory, the power of the bomb. We had conducted the tests in Nevada and New Mexico.  Given this, they must have been able to conceive the suffering it would cause when used on a civilian-populated area.  Could those in leadership conceive it?  If they conceived the full power and range of suffering it would cause, how could they justify doing it?

When asked in an interview with the Huffington Post about the relevance of his film to today's society, Okasaki responded:  
"We used some propaganda films and in one the former ambassador to Japan is describing the Japanese people. All you have to do is exchange the word Japanese with Arab and it's the same description, the same excuse for going to war: It's a 2,000-year-old culture and religion and the people don't care about life on earth because they'll be rewarded in heaven. Of course it's also a description of Christianity. How you make it okay to kill people is you make them really foreign and abstract. And I think that the film has a disturbing relevance now and the possibility of nuclear weapons is closer to home now. I think there's a really strong curiosity today because we're living in a world where people are aware of how dangerous this is. I'm startled that people have been so interested in the film. I expected more denial, more avoidance. It's really gratifying to see how much interest there is in the story."



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