Toshiko Saeki Hiroshima Bombing

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The atomic bombings of Japanese cities and the genocides of the Holocaust are horrific events in human history. Although these events had their differences, they influence the world greatly today because they differ from each other to provide comparisons for history, have significance because of the survivors who tell their personal story, and achieve significance morally as well as immorally. Narratives of a Holocaust survivor and two Hiroshima bombing survivors provide an impact in today’s world where the events of World War Two just cannot be forgotten.
The genocides of Europe differ from the atomic bombings of Japan in many ways. In Toshiko Saeki’s narrative of the Hiroshima bombing, she fails to find her mother in Hiroshima, but is eventually …show more content…

Though, this lowest point in human history has great value in survivor testimonies which display examples of individuals who experienced these historic events. Their testimonies provide a physical reminder World War Two was not long ago. The personal aspect of a testimony is someone who can answer questions and be interactive about an event. In Saeki’s interview, she explains “It seemed very, very strange. I was still wondering what would happen” (SWS 342). Saeki’s experience of what a civilian near Hiroshima thought about planes flying overhead strangely explains the event in a true experience. Additionally, In Levi’s narrative he explains half of his own story, but the other describing the concentration camps a social experiment. The diverse narratives are the personal experience and a generality: this subject may be overlooked by humanity in the future. The general aspect of Levi’s narrative shapes an even greater contrast between the personal piece and stresses the importance of historical context on this level. For example, through a generalized lens one would note the significance of Nazi’s keeping strict track of the Jews through the numbers and noting who all they murdered. Contrastingly this is true, however, through a generalization alone one would not know about prisoners stereotyping different numbers as Levi did, “as for the high numbers they carry an essentially comic air about them, like the words “freshman” or “conscript” in ordinary life” (Levi, 537). This aspect is also expressed within Kuribayashi’s perspective of the Hiroshima bombing. One might expect the people to comply with theirs and others deaths for the reason of war, however, Kuribayashi cried his heart out for the death of his mother. The helpers in the camp did not think lightly of his remorse as he explains “some irritated people reproached me, saying “Be quiet”” (Kuribayashi, 547). He became confused as people should

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