|
|
August 13, 2007
Letter From Nagasaki by
David Rovics
The following is a letter
forwarded to us by David Rovics who is currently on tour here in Japan
and reflects some of his thoughts stimulated by his visit to this
wonderful place.
[You can also find
this essay at www.songwritersnotebook.blogspot.com. Feel free to post and distribute. Also,
if you know any cool person in Portland, Oregon
who's looking for a place to live, I'll soon be looking for a housemate
at my new apartment. Lastly, if you have extra children's books, toys,
or clothing, I'm also looking to furnish my new place with such
stuff...]
Article 9 of the Japanese
Constitution: “Aspiring sincerely to an
international peace based on justice and order, the Japanese people
forever renounce war as a sovereign right of the nation and the threat
or use of force as means of settling international disputes. In order
to accomplish the aim of the preceding paragraph, land, sea, and air
forces, as well as other war potential, will never be maintained. The
right of belligerency of the state will not be recognized.”
I met Eduardo and Lilly
Zaragoza two years ago at an event I was singing at, the annual
fundraising dinner of the Albuquerque
Peace and Justice Center. Eduardo was 79 years old at the time. A
short, gentle, quiet man, he had joined the US Navy at the age of 17
and was sent off to occupy the defeated nation of Japan.
One month after the dropping of the atomic bomb on Nagasaki,
his ship docked in the port, beside the many melted, ruined ships that
sat lifelessly in the harbor. He and his shipmates took a walk around
the annihilated city, the vast expanse of charred and melted rubble
that used to be the city of Nagasaki.
On that day, Eduardo joined the ranks of what the Japanese call the
hibakusha, radiation survivors.
His life has never been
the same since. No matter how much he has tried
to forget, the nightmares of the visions he saw have never ceased. The
masses of bloated bodies floating in the water. The horribly burned,
disfigured, screaming survivors in the makeshift hospital wards he
visited. Like the rest of the hibakusha, Eduardo was mentally scarred
by what he saw. His body has also never been the same. The symptoms of
what we now know as radiation sickness began on his first day off the
ship. When I met him, he and his wife were both struggling with cancer.
Eduardo and Lilly
described to me how they had had four children, not
including the miscarriages. One was stillborn. Two others died of the
same rare disease as young adults. Their last surviving child was
suffering from cancer when I met them. Both of them came from families
with a history of longevity and no history of cancer.
Eduardo was one of many
thousands of US soldiers who were purposefully
exposed to nuclear radiation. Many of the others, in experiments easily
worthy of the Nazi Dr. Mengele, were ordered to walk through desert
areas where nuclear bombs had just been exploded. The horrifying
results on their fragile human bodies were quite predictable, just as
predictable as the military’s denials of reality.
Corbin Harney died of
cancer last month at the age of 87. Untold
numbers of other hibakusha in what we now call the Southwestern United States
did not live to such a ripe old age, but Corbin was special, he was a
Western Shoshone medicine man, from a long line of medicine men. Corbin
was a veteran of World War II.
Upon returning home, his reward for his service was for his home, the
Western Shoshone Nation, to become, technically, the most bombed nation
on Earth. He was to spend most of his adult life campaigning against
nuclear testing in his homeland, the area now generally known as Nevada.
Corbin believed in the
healing power of natural hot springs, among other things. I met him at
his home, the Poo Bah ranch, in Nevada
near the California
border. For decades, Corbin got up before dawn every morning to greet
the sun in a ceremony to which anybody was invited to join. The
ceremony always began with Corbin playing a drum in front of a small
fire. When people gathered with him around the fire, on the morning I
joined him, like thousands of other mornings, he alternated between
singing in his Shoshone language and speaking in English about the
importance of the different elements of life.
He spoke first about the
dark, and how important that was, how
everything needs to rest, how the light comes from the dark, and how
important the dark was “in the times when we were hunted” by the white
invaders, to hide. He spoke about the rocks, how they are all alive,
how some of the rocks are radioactive, which is fine, as long as they
are left in the ground where they belong. He spoke about the wind, and
the wind gusted. He spoke about the light, and just then, the sun poked
up above the horizon. He spoke about the rain, and in this arid desert,
for a few brief seconds, right then, the rain fell.
A few days before Corbin
died on July 10th, he joked with his friends
and relatives present that he would die at 11:00. Not to anyone’s
surprise, he kept his word. After he died, his relatives saw four dog
soldiers appear from the fog outside his window to take him away. I
believe them.
I remember reading in a
book how there was a brief period when the
Indians were more or less left alone, near the beginning of the 20th
century. After decades of “shoot on sight” genocidal warfare against
the Indian nations of the west, after the lifeblood of so many people,
the buffalo, were systematically slaughtered nearly into extinction by
the Army and the settlers, after the last of the free Indian people
were driven at gunpoint onto barren reservations and then starved to
death en masse by corrupt government officials, there was a brief time
when they were allowed to try to survive on their barren reservations.
A brief period where although the buffalo were gone, their land was
stolen, their previous means of livelihood were robbed of them, at
least they were not being slaughtered by the Army.
Then on the Lakota and
Navajo reservations and elsewhere, oil, coal and
uranium were discovered. For so many hundreds of thousands of people
ever since then, life has once again been a nightmare of uranium and
coal mines, back-breaking labor, poisoning of the water, land, and air,
and premature death by cancer -- or by bullets, for daring to resist
the uranium-mining corporations, such as the dozens of unsolved,
uninvestigated murders of American Indian Movement activists in the
1970’s.
I remember reading
somewhere that the cancer rate on the Navajo
reservation – where there are hundreds of uranium mines, some closed,
some still functioning, all toxic wastelands – is eight times the
national average. It was sometime after that, in the early 1990’s,
after the first US invasion of Iraq, that I read another statistic,
that the cancer rate in Iraq
had also risen by eight times what it had been before the invasion. And
in southern Iraq,
where most of the US artillery had been fired and bombs had fallen, so
many of them full of “depleted” uranium, vaporizing on impact, the
cancer rate was far higher.
I write this from Japan,
where I’m doing a concert tour. I was unprepared for the extreme heat
and humidity here, it’s like Houston
or New Orleans,
and with climate change kicking in it’s even hotter than usual. Seeking
respite from the heat, I found myself in my air conditioned hotel room
in Hiroshima,
reading Robert Fisk’s most recent, magnificent book, The Great War for
Civilization. That day I was on the chapter about the “Gulf War” and
it’s aftermath. He didn’t use the word, but Fisk was writing about
Iraq’s hibakusha, the innumerable children turning up at the
overstretched hospital wards of Basra
with “rare” cancers – children with leukemia (cancer of the blood),
brain cancer, young teenage girls with breast cancer. Cancers the
experienced Iraqi doctors had never seen in people so young, and
certainly in nothing like the kind of numbers they were having to deal
with at that time, and ever since then.
I arrived at Tokyo’s
Narita Airport just about a month ago, and witnessed the
almost completely rebuilt megalopolis that is Tokyo,
and the seemingly unending expanse of cities surrounding it. During the
war with the US, almost every major city in Japan
was bombed into oblivion. Hundreds of thousands of children, women,
senior citizens and others were indiscriminately slaughtered from the
air. A few cities were being saved as potential A-Bomb targets, and the
beautiful city of Kyoto
was the only major city to survive the war structurally intact. After
the USAF
began running out of major cities to destroy, they started bombing
small cities and larger towns. Indiscriminately bombing hospitals,
schools, temples, churches, houses, entire neighborhoods – and yes,
factories, too. All this with “conventional” weapons.
At my first hotel room
there by the airport, NHK (Japan’s equivalent of
the BBC) was delivering the news, talking at length (with English
overdubs available at the push of a button for some of the programs)
about the earthquake that had just hit northern Japan before I left Portland,
and about the nuclear reactor – the world’s largest in terms of
electrical output -- that had caught fire and leaked radioactive water
as a result. Usually this time of year northern Japan is bustling with
visitors, but tourism in the area over the next weeks was down by 90%,
NHK said. Apparently most Japanese people didn’t believe the
government’s assurances that the radioactive leak was “insignificant.”
After all they’ve been through with radiation, it’s easy to understand
why.
On NHK they were also
broadcasting the Asian Cup,
the Asian version of the World Cup, one of the most-watched sporting
events on the planet. (Except for in the US, where the 45 minutes of
uninterrupted play make soccer a commercially unviable sport for TV.) Iraq
won, and in halting English, the Iraqi team’s captain spoke out in
front of the world’s media against the US occupation of his country,
and said that after the game he was going to Qatar
because it wasn’t safe to live in Iraq.
He spoke of some of his dead friends and family members.
And then it occurred to
me, not for the first time, but there in Japan
for the first time, the thought hit me that the United States has been bombing a nation somewhere in Asia
for most of the past 66 years. So soon after the virtual annihilation
of Japan from the air, the USAF
went ahead and did the same thing in Korea, dropping even more bombs on
Korea than all sides in WWII combined, killing millions of innocent
people and half a million Chinese soldiers (did you even know, dear
reader, that we fought a war with China?).
In the same year that
that war ended, we were sending in Theodore Roosevelt’s grandson, Kermit, to overthrow the
democratically-elected government of Iran,
replacing him with one of history’s most tyrannical dictators, the
Shah, who was to rule Iran
with unspeakable brutality for the next quarter century. Then a few
years later we were to invade Vietnam,
completely destroying the country over the course of fifteen very long
years, in the course of which we also invaded Laos
and Cambodia,
killing an estimated three million innocent civilians through
indiscrimate carpet-bombing of three countries, leading directly to the
insane Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia
which then proceeded to kill so many more. (And I wretch every time I
hear yet another person in the US say that “55,000 people died in Vietnam.”
Just what defines “people” to those who would utter such a scandalous
sentence?)
There are always
pretenses for these invasions, and they are never
called invasions. We support dictatorships in the name of democracy,
overthrow democracies in the name of fighting “communism,” and when
that bogeyman no longer inspired fear, then “terrorism” became the new
watchword. And every day, more people worldwide die in car accidents
than die in a year from non-state terrorism. Every day, more people die
from falling down the stairs than those who die in a year from
non-state terrorism. Every day, far more people die from breathing the
toxic air – of cancer – than those who die in a year from non-state
terrorism. But we invade countries and kill millions to stop the
“terrorists,” while we relax environmental laws (in the name of “the
economy”) which results directly in the deaths of millions more.
And when people in
“America” doubt the wisdom of these invasions, when
people raise questions about our government spending more every year on
“defense” than the rest of the world combined while our cities are
flooded, our bridges are collapsing, and millions of our children are
going to bed hungry, sick and without health care, or the ability to
read or write, we are told that we mustn’t be “isolationist.” We are
told that there are “evil men” and “evil regimes” in this world that we
must stop before they acquire nuclear weapons.
But they are mostly
arming themselves to defend themselves from a
possible – even likely – invasion by us. This is the historical
reality, whatever the pundits say, whatever the textbooks say, whatever
the politicians say. (And if you’d like to see the hard evidence,
please pick up a copy of Joseph Gerson’s excellent book, Empire and the
Bomb.)
Somehow we are never the
ones who started it. Somehow we need to have
these 10,000 nuclear weapons, each one 1,000 times deadlier than the
bomb that annihilated Hiroshima.
And if you don’t believe it, they say, if our arguments about evil
regimes and WMD’s and democracy are not convincing, remember World War II. Remember Hitler, remember the Nazi
holocaust, remember the “Good War.” (Now, if you believe that the US
entered the war in Europe
to save my Jewish relatives then maybe you also believe that we’re in Iraq to
save the Kurds and the Shiites, and I’ve got a bridge to sell you in Minneapolis, but I’ll save that tract for another
essay.)
Remember the Good War.
Remember the Rape of Nanking, when Japanese occupation soldiers raped
and murdered their way through China,
killing an estimated 100,000 in Nanking alone. Remember Hitler, who
systematically killed millions in an orchestrated orgy of death unlike
anything the world had ever seen -- well, at least not since the Turks
and their Kurdish underlings did the same thing to the Armenians, with
nobody seriously doing anything to stop them, one short generation
earlier, during the dying throes of the defeated Ottoman Empire.
Systematic killing of
millions in an orchestrated, high-tech genocide, aimed at wiping out
entire populations of human beings.
Walking around the cities
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the reminders of
the atomic bombings, and of the desire of the people of these cities
for a peaceful world free of nuclear weapons, are everywhere. On
plaques, in museums, in the parks. Everywhere I went, walking around
beneath the blazing sun that shines mercilessly, constantly, after the
rainy season ends every summer, I just kept getting the same cold,
eerie feeling I remember well from visiting the concentration camps
that have been preserved for posterity in Germany.
Visting Buchenwald I
remember the feeling, how can such an unspeakable
horror as the Nazi holocaust possibly be represented effectively within
the walls of a building? How can pictures, videos, hair, shoes, teeth,
the few remains of the many dead, how can these things project the
scope of this nightmare? They can’t, really. But somehow, being there –
and I know I’m not alone in this feeling – the ghosts are alive. Sit
quietly for a few minutes in Buchenwald and you can hear the screams of
the dying, feel the silence of the dead. The single candle burning in
the middle of the empty room in the former gas chamber, with the Jewish
prayer for forgiveness in the background, somehow communicates more
than you might imagine if you haven’t been there.
It’s like that in Hiroshima.
Seeing the few documentaries that ever make it onto TV in the US,
hearing the testimonies of the hibakusha who occasionally visit the
country that destroyed their cities and speak to the relatively few
people who come to hear them, just isn’t the same. These cities were
wiped out. They ceased to exist. Everything was gone. How can
nothingness be memorialized? It can’t. But of the three
steel-reinforced, concrete structures in Hiroshima
that partially survived the apocalypse of August 6th, 1945, what is
known as the Atomic Dome has been left as it was on that day. Mostly
destroyed, but still recognizeable as a building. Most of the concrete
turned to rubble, steel beams bent like straw, the inside completely
gutted and burned long ago, when my parents were children.
This is what happened to
an earthquake-proof, steel-reinforced
structure. But this was a city of small wooden houses with clay tile
roofs. All around this dome for miles, in this city surrounded by
mountains, in this valley as far as the eye could see, were just
flattened houses. In and around those houses, 70,000 people died in a
matter of seconds, mostly women, children, and senior citizens.
Thousands more lived long
enough – sometimes only a few minutes,
sometimes a few hours – to walk, naked, their clothes having been
burned off of them, their bodies charred black and red, their skin
hanging off of them like seaweed, their arms outstretched, crying,
walking on top of the collapsed houses of their neighbors, stepping
over the dead and dying, walking towards one of the two rivers that
flowed through the city. Many died before they got to the river, others
died once they got to the river, and the rivers turned red from blood,
and then black from radioactive ash that rained down from the sky.
There were so many bodies in the river that they piled up and formed a
huge dam.
Standing between those
rivers, there in front of the dome at 3 am one
evening, the words of the hibakusha I had had dinner with earlier came
back to me. They were recounting the bits that they remembered, that
trauma-induced amnesia had not obliterated. Every time was like
reliving the experience, but they felt duty-bound to tell the stories
to those who would listen.
Dr. Shoji Sawada was 13
when the bomb fell. He was sick that day, and unlike most people in Hiroshima,
at 8:15 am he was not up and about, but was in bed, shielded by walls
from the initial flash of light that burned tens of thousands of people
to a crisp instantly. Shoji suddenly found himself covered in the
rubble of his house, but managed to squirm out from under it.
Then he heard his mother
calling. He looked around and couldn’t see
her. Then he realized she was beneath him, pinned underneath a
smoldering beam of wood. He tried with all his might to move the beam,
but it was far beyond his physical abilities. He looked outside for
help, but everyone around him was dead or dying. He went back in and
tried to move the beam again, to no avail. The initial blast was as hot
as the sun, which is what instantly killed anybody within a kilometer
of it who was directly exposed, and most people within several
kilometers of it. Immediately following this was a massive gust of wind
many times stronger than the strongest typhoon, which is what flattened
all the houses and snapped all the trees like toothpicks (leaving only
parts of those few aforementioned steel structures, and a number of
smokestacks, their cylindrical shape protecting them from the blast of
wind).
Just after the wind,
Shoji-san explained, everything combustible
immediately caught fire. With the flames lapping at his legs, unable to
move the beam of wood, he said, “forgive me, mother,” and ran towards
the river. “Study hard and be a good student,” were her last words. And
then she was burned to death, as her son survived the rest of the day
in the river, surrounded by what can only be described as hell on
Earth. Every day he remembers his mother, and her last words, and feels
the pain and the guilt of the survivor once again.
Now multiply this scene
by 70,000.
This was premeditated,
high-tech mass murder targeted at civilians.
Genocide. It was the Japanese holocaust. It was done to a country that
was in complete ruins, whose government was in the process of
attempting to surrender, but the “Allies” were pretending not to hear
these messages because they wanted to drop the bomb first, to “send a
message” to the Soviet Union,
among other reasons. It was done to a country that had virtually no
functioning industry. Yes, Mitsubishi had an armanents factory in Hiroshima,
I learned from a visit to the museum there, but what the museum didn’t
mention was that the workers were going there and waiting for parts
which never arrived. Japanese industry was essentially totally crippled
by the summer of 1945. There was no military value to the city of Hiroshima
– even if having military value could possibly justify slaughtering
70,000 civilians.
Against the advice of
most of the top military brass, Truman and Churchill connived to drop
the atom bomb on Hiroshima,
knowing full well that it would result in indiscriminate death and
destruction to an entire city.
And then they did it
again, three days later, in Nagasaki,
after the Japanese emperor had personally become involved in attempting
to surrender to the “Allies,” under the same conditions of Germany’s
surrender at Potsdam.
Incidentally, the bomb over Nagasaki
was dropped directly above the biggest concentration of Catholics in
East Asia, almost directly over the biggest cathedral in East Asia,
over a city that contained a POW camp, and all this was known to Truman
and Churchill and his advisors who supported dropping the first and
second bombs.
Completely annihilating
one city full of civilians, and then doing it
to another – after raining down death from “conventional” bombs
indiscriminately throughout almost every population center in the
nation. This “conventional” holocaust of unprecedented proportions was
carried out by “FDR,”
that great hero of the working class in the United States. Nuclear hell on Earth was brought to
Hiroshima and Nagasaki by that down-to-Earth hoosier who never went to
college, Harry Truman, and by his good friend Winston Churchill,
the man lionized in the history books for saving Britain from Nazi
tyranny. The fact that he also ordered the gassing of Iraqis a few
years earlier and supervised the firebombing of Dresden, Berlin,
Hamburg and most other major cities in Germany,
himself responsible for killing hundreds of thousands of German
civilians, is usually conveniently overlooked.
There was no “Good War.”
Every war the US has been involved with since the “American” Revolution has been a war for empire, based on lies
just as blatant as Colin Powell’s
31 lies he presented to the UN a few short years ago, as the corporate
media hung on every ridiculous word. The victors write most of the
histories, but many other histories are out there, often out of print,
growing mold on the book shelves in the libraries of “America,” rarely
used. As a result, we are a nation made up largely of idiots (thank
you, Green Day).
A Gallup poll two years ago asked people in the US whether they thought
the dropping of the atomic bombs on Japan
was “necessary” to end the war. 57% said it was. This is beyond
shameful, not to mention completely ahistorical, proof of the
effectiveness of the bald propaganda of the victors of this “Good War.”
What if you asked a
modern-day German whether they thought the
holocaust was “necessary” -- perhaps “necessary” to garner support for
the German occupation from the largely anti-Semitic populations of the
nations of eastern Europe? Even the very question would be appalling.
Anyone answering “yes” would be considered something akin to a
holocaust denier, some kind of monster, appropriately enough. What if
you asked a modern-day Japanese person if the rape of Nanking was
“necessary”? If he was a politician and answered in the affirmative to
this question he would probably be driven out of office, just like
Prime Minister Abe’s Defense Minister last month.
No, the Japanese
Holocaust was not “necessary.” By any reasonable
accounting of history, what was done to Hiroshima and Nagasaki was a
holocaust as horrible in scope as what the Nazis did to Europe,
except that it was carried out in a matter of seconds rather than
years. By any reasonable accounting of history, Harry Truman and Winston Churchill were morally equivalent to Adolf Hitler. By any reasonable accounting of history,
those in charge of the US Air Force were moral equivalents of the SS.
And why does it matter
whether long-dead presidents were war criminals
or not? Because the cliché is true: if you don’t understand
history,
you are doomed to repeat it. Because many of the hibakusha in Japan
and around the world are still alive, and they deserve some ounce of
dignity. Because if you believe the billionaires that run this country
are capable of fighting a “Good War,” capable of defending the rights
of the oppressed somewhere in the world, you might believe they could
do that again. But they never have, they aren’t now, and they never
will. Not in Vietnam,
not in Afghanistan, not in Iraq,
not in Iran,
not in Syria,
not in North Korea, nowhere.
They are running an
empire -- a vicious, genocidal empire that’s been
dominating much of the world for many decades. Kennedy was running it –
he nearly ended life on Earth twice in his short tenure as president.
Eisenhower, the butcher of Korea, was running it. Johnson, the butcher
of Vietnam,
was running it. Nixon, the butcher of Cambodia,
was running it. Clinton was running it – he, like the rest, threatened
to use nuclear weapons against both Iraq
and Korea. He said “nuclear weapons are the cornerstone of our foreign
policy.” His wife, Hillary, has also said “all options are on the
table.” And we hopefully all know about Bush.
All of these people were
(and in the case of the Clintons and the
Bushes, are) terrorists of the worst kind. They are nuclear terrorists.
What they seem to have learned from history is that it’s OK to kill and
to threaten to kill millions of innocent civilians – and to risk the
lives of billions more, including hundreds of millions of vulnerable
people inside the United States – if they deem that it serves their
interests.
What is clearly in our
interests – and certainly in the interests of
other human beings around the world – is to rise up against these
“democratic” despots. If there is any possibility of redeeming the soul
of this place we call “America,” this madness must be stopped. We may
have exported our entire manufacturing base to China,
but the weapons of mass destruction (and most of our “conventional”
weapons) are still made in the USA.
The functioning of the
government requires the consent of the governed.
It can and must be withdrawn. One by one, or hopefully, in our
millions. The most important lesson of history, the one that the rulers
of “America” most want to keep from us, is that mass movements can
achieve everything. That another world is possible. That democracy is
in the streets. And that “evil” does not usually come in the form of a
frothing-at-the-mouth dictator.
Evil, as has been pointed
out before, is more often banal. Evil pays
taxes. Evil pushes papers. Evil designs missiles, programs computers.
Evil drops the bombs, but evil also sits by while others do that, and
evil watches and fails to act. Evil is silent. Evil is patriotic. Evil
waves a flag. Evil writes lying propaganda for textbooks and
newspapers. Evil believes that genocide could possibly be excusable,
let alone “necessary.”
|
|