Ms.
Akiko Takakura was 20 years old when the bomb fell. She was
in the Bank of Hiroshima, 300 meters away from the
hypocenter. Ms. Takakura miraculously escaped death despite
over 100 lacerated wounds on her back. She is one of the few
survivors who was within 300 meters of the hypocenter. She
now runs a kindergarten and she relates her experience of
the atomic bombing to children.
TAKAKURA:
After the air-raid the alarm was called off, I walked from
Hatchobori to the Bank of Hiroshima in Kamiya-cho. I arrived
at the bank some time around 8:15 or so, and signed my name
in the attendance book. When I was doing my morning routine,
dusting the desks and things like that, the A-bomb was
dropped. All I remember was that I saw something flash
suddenly.
INTERVIEWER:
Can you explain the flash?
TAKAKURA:
Well, it was like a white magnesium flash. I lost
consciousness right after or almost at the same time I saw
the flash. When I regained consciousness, I found myself in
the dark. I heard my friends, Ms. Asami, crying for her
mother. Soon after, I found out that we actually had been
attacked. Afraid of being caught by a fire, I told Ms. Asami
to run out of the building. Ms. Asami, however, just told me
to leave her and to try to escape by myself because she
thought that she couldn't make it anywhere. She said she
couldn't move. I said to her that I couldn't leave her, but
she said that she couldn't even stand up. While we were
talking, the sky started to grow lighter. Then, I heard
water running in the lavatory. Apparently the water pipes
had exploded. So I drew water with my helmet to pour over
Ms. Asami's head again and again. She finally regained
consciousness fully and went out of the building with me. We
first thought to escape to the parade grounds, but we
couldn't because there was a huge sheet of fire in front of
us. So instead, we squatted down in the street next to a big
water pool for fighting fires, which was about the size of
this table. Since Hiroshima was completely enveloped in
flames, we felt terribly hot and could not breathe well at
all. After a while, a whirlpool of fire approached us from
the south. It was like a big tornado of fire spreading over
the full width of the street. Whenever the fire touched,
wherever the fire touched, it burned. It burned my ear and
leg, I didn't realize that I had burned myself at that
moment, but I noticed it later.
INTERVIEWER:
So the fire came towards you?
TAKAKURA:
Yes, it did. The whirlpool of fire that was covering the
entire street approached us from Ote-machi. So, everyone
just tried so hard to keep away from the fire. It was just
like a living hell. After a while, it began to rain. The
fire and the smoke made us so thirsty and there was nothing
to drink, no water, and the smoke even disturbed our eyes.
As it began to rain, people opened their mouths and turned
their faces towards the sky and try to drink the rain, but
it wasn't easy to catch the rain drops in our mouths. It was
a black rain with big drops.
INTERVIEWER:
How big were the rain drops?
TAKAKURA:
They were so big that we even felt pain when they dropped
onto us. We opened our mouths just like this, as wide as
possible in an effort to quench our thirst. Everybody did
the same thing. But it just wasn't enough. Someone, someone
found an empty can and held it to catch the rain.
INTERVIEWER:
I see. Did the black rain actually quench your thirst?
TAKAKURA:
No, no it didn't. Maybe I didn't catch enough rain, but I
still felt very thirsty and there was nothing I could do
about it. What I felt at that moment was that Hiroshima was
entirely covered with only three colors. I remember red,
black and brown, but, but, nothing else. Many people on the
street were killed almost instantly. The fingertips of those
dead bodies caught fire and the fire gradually spread over
their entire bodies from their fingers. A light gray liquid
dripped down their hands, scorching their fingers. I, I was
so shocked to know that fingers and bodies could be burned
and deformed like that. I just couldn't believe it. It was
horrible. And looking at it, it was more than painful for me
to think how the fingers were burned, hands and fingers that
would hold babies or turn pages, they just, they just burned
away. For a few years after the A-bomb was dropped, I was
terribly afraid of fire. I wasn't even able to get close to
fire because all my senses remembered how fearful and
horrible the fire was, how hot the blaze was, and how hard
it was to breathe the hot air. It was really hard to
breathe. Maybe because the fire burned all the oxygen, I
don't know. I could not open my eyes enough because of the
smoke, which was everywhere. Not only me but everyone felt
the same. And my parts were covered with holes.