Gabe Vincenzo
Essay About the
Novel Hiroshima
Welcome to the nuclear age. Temperature are
hotter than the surface of the sun. Light is blinding. Air pressure is deadly.
Radiation is lethal.
The experiences of six people that survived the
planets first nuclear explosion are reported to us in Hiroshima by John
Hershey. The book begins by describing the situation of the six individuals
just before and at the moment of the explosion that changed history.
The book first introduces Miss. Sasaki, a tin
factory secretary, who had just turned to say something to her friend. Next,
Dr. Masakazu Fugii, a doctor at a private hospital, was about the sit on his
porch and read the daily newspaper. Then, Mrs. Hatsuyo Nakamura was looking at
his next door neighbor through her kitchen window. Fr. Wilhelm Kliensorge, a
German priest, was lying on a couch in his house reading a magazine. We
continue with Dr. Teru Fumi Sasaki, a surgeon, was walking down the hospital
hallway carrying blood specimens. Finally, Rev. Mr. Kayo She Tanimoto, the
pastor of the Hiroshima Methodist Church, was about to put away some clothes.
While these innocents civilians were carrying out there lives, yet unknown to
them, a plane called the Enola Gay silently passed unnoticed overhead and
quietly dropped the worlds deadliest bomb that changed history forever. All
they saw was split second, tremendous flash of light which gave them just
enough time to turn there heads and then chaos rang out like church bells on a
Sunday morning.
When the bomb detonated all hell broke loose.
Miss. Sasaki was knocked unconscious when her bookcase trampled her to the
ground. Dr. Masakazu Fugii was tossed, like a stone, into the nearby river.
Mrs. Hatsuyo Nakamura was trapped under her many household items. Fr. Wilhelm
Kleinsorge feel to the ground, and hid behind his desk. Dr. Teru Fumi Sasaki
simply fell to the ground. And finally Rev. Mr. Kayo She Tanimoto was hurled to
the ground and covered by the garments he was putting away.
The scope of destruction was enormous. It
looked like an apocalypse. Everything near the centre of were the bomb dropped
was totally obliterated. Buildings turned to rubble. People turned to ash. It
was chaotic. The survivors were running mad along the streets in a fog of
radiation. Some suffered burn marks, some severed limbs, others, who
unfortunately stood outside when the bomb dropped, were permanently burned to
the sides of buildings and roasted like an insect on a bed of lava. Nothing was
left but the cries of the survivors. Civilizations just came crashing over
Hiroshima
The scope of the moral destruction was also
unprecedented. It was very obvious that the bomb was in the wrong hands. Just
like the Emperor and the flying machine, he was afraid not of what the man who
invented the flying machine, but the people who could get their hands on it. IT
is very odd that at the same time the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, so did the
television on the Western world. Television is an evil in itself. It tries to make
us forget about what is going on, in this case Hiroshima, and diverts our
attention to commercials and soap operas. It is like a shield that is poisoning
our minds into thinking that the dropping of the bomb is irrelevant, and slowly
starts to pull us away until we forget it ever happened. War is inhumanity run
wild on the largest scale. Until this century, people had to kill others one at
a time. Until this century our savage impulses had a limit. Science changed all
that. One person can destroy many at the touch of a button. Thus, there are
fewer limits to savagery as in Hiroshima. These days, the killing experience is
remote and the savagery comes easy, because there moral horror is remote. We
sense that we could have easily been in their place. Hence the popularity of
T.V.. The enormous scale of horror is a nagging reminder of our weakness and
fear. We can't go back to killing one at a time or in large numbers. To prevent
this requires an intelligent strength. Were is the good tyrant to keep everyone
in strength?.
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