Every Second Counts for the Survivors

Webinar with CND, Peace Boat and the Hibakusha Project. The event features Mr Miyake Nobuo, a survivor of the Hiroshima nuclear bombing, speaking about what happened on that day and his experience of campaigning against nuclear weapons.

Hiroshima/Nagasaki Newsletter

The latest Merseyside CND newsletter, a special edition on the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, is now available to download and features:

  • An editorial on the bombings from MCND Co-Chair, Peter Wilson
  • A timeline of significant events before and after the bombings
  • Common questions and answers
  • Hiroshima survivor trees
  • Coming events

CND Peace Cranes Challenge

This year marks the 75th anniversary of the atomic bombings of the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which resulted in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of innocent men, women and children.

As part of our work in commemorating the anniversary, and telling the stories of those who lived through the bombings, today we are launching the CND Peace Crane challenge – will you take part?

We’re asking supporters to get sponsored by family and friends to fold origami peace cranes, to raise money to help our campaign against nuclear weapons so the world never has to see another Hiroshima or Nagasaki. Our suggested target is 75 cranes – one for each year since the bomb was dropped – but you can of course set your own target instead.

Everyone can take part, and you don’t need any previous experience of origami – we have a variety of guides available to help you. And by taking the challenge, you can help us continue to campaign for a nuclear-free world. So if you’d like to help, then sign up for CND’s Peace Crane challenge today.

A message from the Mayor of Hiroshima

The City of Hiroshima

Peace Declaration | August 6th 2019


MATSUI Kazumi, Mayor of Hiroshima

Around the world today, we see self-centered nationalism in ascendance, tensions heightened by international exclusivity and rivalry, with nuclear disarmament at a standstill. What are we to make of these global phenomena?

Having undergone two world wars, our elders pursued an ideal – a world beyond war. They undertook to construct a system of international co-operation. Should we not now recall and, for human survival, strive for an ideal world? I ask this especially of you, the youth, who have never known war but will lead the future. For this purpose, I ask you to listen carefully to the hibakusha of August 6th 1945.

A woman who was 5 then has written this poem:

Little sister with a bowl cut, head spraying blood

Embraced by Mother, turned raging Asura

A youth of 18 saw this:

“They were nearly naked, their clothes burned to tatters, but I couldn’t tell the men from the women. Hair gone, eyeballs popped out, lips and ears ripped off, skin hanging from faces, bodies covered in blood – and so many”.

Today he insists, ” We must never, ever allow this to happen to any future generation. We are enough”.

Appeals like this come from survivors who carry deep scars in body adn soul. Are they reaching you?

“A single person is small and weak, but if each of us seeks peace, I’m sure we can stop the forces pushing for war”. This women was 15 at the time. Can we allow her faith to end up an empty wish?

Turning to the world, we do see that individuals have little power, but we can also see many examples of the combined strength of multitudes achieving their goal. Indian independence is one such example. Mahatma Gandhi, who contributed to that independence through personal pain and suffering, left us these words, “Intolerance is itself a form of violence and an obstacle to the growth of a true democratic spirit.”

To confront out current circumstances and achieve a peaceful, sustainable world, we must transcend differences to status or opinion and strive together in a spirit of tolerance toward our ideal. To accomplish this, coming generations must never dismiss the atomic bombings and the war as mere events of the past. It is vital that they internalise the progress of the hibakusha and others have made toward a peaceful world, the drive steadfastly forward.

World leaders must move forward with them, advancing civil society’s ideal. This is why I urge them to visit the atomic-bombed cities, listen to hibakusha and tour the Peace Memorial Museum and the National Peace Memorial Hall to face what actually happened in the lives of individual victims and their loved ones. I want our current leaders to remember their courageous predecessors: when nuclear superpowers, the U.S. and U.S.S.R., were engaged in a tense, escalating nuclear arms race, their leaders manifested reason and turned to dialogue to seek disarmament.

This city, along with the nearly 7,500 member cities of Mayors for Peace, is spreading the Spirit of Hiroshima throughout civil society to create an environment supportive of leaders taking action for nuclear abolition. We want leaders around the world to pursue negotiations in good faith on nuclear disarmament, as mandated by Article VI of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (TPNW), a milestone on the road to a nuclear weapon free world.

I call on the government of the only country to experience a nuclear weapon in war to accede to the hibakusha’s request that the TPNW be signed and ratified. I urge Japan’s leaders to manifest the pacifism of the Japanese Constitution by displaying leadership in taking the next step toward a world free from nuclear weapons. Furthermore, I demand policies that expand the “black rain areas” and improve assistance to the hibakusha whose average age exceeds 82, as well as the many others whose minds, bodies and daily lives are still plagued by suffering due to the harmful effects of radiation.

Today, at this Peace Memorial Ceremony commemorating 74 years since the atomic bombing we offer our heartfelt consolation to the souls of the atomic bomb victims and, in concert with the city of Nagasaki and kindred spirits around the world, we pledge to make effort to achieve the total elimination of nuclear weapons and beyond that, a world of genuine, lasting peace.

MATSUI Kazumi, Mayor of the City of Hiroshima

Hiroshima and Nagasaki Day 2019

On 6th August, Merseyside CND and Liverpool Pax Christi were joined by former Lord Mayor of Liverpool, Christine Banks, as we remembered the victims of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Over the 260,000 were killed in one of the worst atrocities in human history. The only way to ensure that it never happens again is for all 9 nations that possess nuclear weapons, to abolish them.

We call on the British Government to abandon it’s plans to renew Trident and sign the Nuclear Weapon Ban Treay

All images © John Usher