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Hiroshima 70 years on

By Linley Grant - posted Thursday, 6 August 2015


On 6 August, it will be the 70th anniversary of the day America dropped a nuclear bomb on the people of Hiroshima and then Nagasaki. The incredible horror of those events, with thousands killed and millions more affected by radiation, was burnt into my memory. I was at school that day. I remember walking the mile to and from it, picking buttercups and playing with a frog on the edge of a drain; stopping to watch a brown butterfly enjoying life and listening to a soaring lark. Then listening to the ugly news of WW2 that night, realizing that the dropping of nuclear bombs created an incredible, new enormity.

These days, it seems like a nightmare most Australians do not remember or, of which they have no comprehension. So much has changed, with women busily rushing to work and shopping, as if food and clothing were the most important things in life; where, in busy restaurants, "to eat, drink and be merry" is the daily mantra, and only fleeting thoughts are given to our marvellous world with its spring blossoms and bird song; and even less to the really important action we should be taking to keep our island and our planet as each is - a wonderful place in which to live..

Is this because we cannot bear to acknowledge the underlying fear we have because we cannot control earthquakes, global warming and nuclear disasters? Certainly, earthquakes and the moving of the tectonic plates below us, are beyond control, but we can do something about man-made problems.

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Who remembers the destruction of the Pacific atolls and other sites of nuclear testing like Maralinga in South Australia? All still basically uninhabitable. More recently the world has experienced a string of disasters at nuclear power plants like Chernobyl, and search for a place to dump nuclear waste, which should remind us that we still do not have an answer to safely using uranium.

Should we, as educated Australians, tolerate, or refuse to think clearly about the massive global problems the use of uranium has caused? Like the 18000, probably 22,000 nuclear weapons, which could destroy us all at any time, despite Nuclear Non-proliferation, Partial Test-ban and Comprehensive Test Ban treaties. Is the recent US treaty with Iran concerning the non-production of nuclear material for weapons a matter for rejoicing? Is it sufficient? Is all right with the world? Of course it isn't. No country in the world needs unsafe nuclear weapons, or another nuclear accident which can destroy the future of the planet? Not having nuclear weapons does not exempt us, as Australians. What can we do?

The Dutch people have taken a class action against their Government on the grounds that duty of care has been violated in respect of global warming. Perhaps citizens of every country where ageing nuclear weapons are stored should take out class actions too, against their Governments, on the grounds that nuclear weapons similarly threaten their safety, just as global warming does.

Governments have taken little notice, despite recent global petitions signed by millions of people, asking for action on various issues like, education for all children, an end to slavery, unjust detention and a cessation of the arms trade. What a different world it would be If the billions of dollars which have gone into creating and maintaining nuclear weapons had gone into providing– arable land, fresh potable water, nourishing food, secular education, hospitals and health care.

Perhaps if we, the people, acted together with courage and took class actions against those Governments possessing nuclear weapons, the United Nations for being inactive and those who work in the nuclear industry, so that these people with power to act, are forced to get rid of these obscene weapons, we could all feel that we, who are living now, had done something worthwhile in our time on earth to rid it of the fear which was created seventy years ago when Hiroshima was destroyed.

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About the Author

Linley Grant has a long record of community service in Tasmania for which she was awarded an OAM in 1993.

Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

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