Next is Mr.
Isao Kita. He was 33 years old when the bomb fell. He was
working for the Hiroshima District Weather Bureau 3.7 km
from the hypocenter. He was the chief weather man and his
shift fell on August 5 to 6. He kept observing the weather
even after he was exposed.
MR. KITA:
Well, at that time, I happened to be receiving the
transmission over the wireless. I was in the receiving room
and I was facing northward. I noticed the flashing light. It
was not really a big flash. But still it drew my attention.
In a few seconds, the heat wave arrived. After I noticed the
flash, white clouds spread over the blue sky. It was
amazing. It was as if blue morning-glories had suddenly
bloomed up in the sky. It was funny, I thought. Then came
the heat wave. It was very very hot. Even though there was a
window glass in front of me, I felt really hot. It was as if
I was looking directly into a kitchen oven. I couldn't bear
the heat for a long time.
Then I heard
the cracking sound. I don't know what made that sound, but
probably it came from the air which suddenly expanded in the
room. By that time, I realized that the bomb had been
dropped. As I had been instructed, I pushed aside the chair
and lay with my face on the floor. Also as I had been
instructed during the frequent emergency exercises, I
covered my eyes and ears with hands like this. And I started
to count. You may feel that I was rather heartless just to
start counting. But for us, who observed the weather, it is
a duty to record the process of time, of various phenomena.
So I started counting with the light flash. When I counted
to 5 seconds, I heard the groaning sound. At the same time,
the window glass was blown off and the building shook from
the bomb blast. So the blast reached that place about 5
seconds after the explosion.
We later
measured the distance between the hypocenter and our place.
And with these two figures, we calculated that the speed of
the blast was about 700 meters per second. The speed of
sound is about 330 meters per second, which means that the
speed of the blast was about twice as fast as the speed of
sound. It didn't move as fast as the speed of light but it
moved quite rapidly. There is a path which leads by here
over there. And on that day, a large number of injured
persons walked this way along the path toward the Omi
Hospital. They were bleeding all over and some of them had
no clothes. Many of them were carrying people on their
shoulders. Looking at the injured, I realized how seriously
the town had been damaged. The fire was its peak at around
that time. It thundered 10 times between 10 and 11 o'clock.
The sound of thunder itself was not so great but still I
could see the lightning over the fire. When I looked down on
the town from the top of that hill, I could see that the
city was completely lost. The city turned into a yellow
sand. It turned yellow, the color of the yellow desert.
INTERVIEWER:
Was this before the fire broke out?
ANSWER: Yes.
The town looked yellowish. The smoke was so thick that it
covered the entire town. After about 5 minutes, fire broke
out here and there. The fire gradually grew bigger and there
were smoke everywhere and so we could no longer see towards
the town. The cloud of the smoke was very tall, but it
didn't come in this direction at all. The cloud moved in
that direction from the ocean towards Hiroshima Station. It
moved towards the north. The smoke from the fire, it was
like a screen dividing the city into two parts. The sun was
shining brightly just like it was a middle of the summer
over here on this side. And behind the cloud on the other
side, it was completely dark. The contrast was very much. So
about 60 or 70 % of the sky was covered by the cloud and the
other 30 % was completely clear. It was a bright clear blue
sky. The condition had remained like this for some time.
From Koi,
looking towards Hiroshima Station, you could see the black
rain falling. But from here, I couldn't judge how much rain
was falling. But based on the information I heard later, it
seems that the rain fell quite heavy over a period of
several hours. It was a black and sticky rain. It stuck
everything. When it fell on trees and leaves, it stayed and
turned everything black. When it fell on people's clothing,
the clothing turned black. It also stuck on people's hands
and feet. And it couldn't be washed off. I couldn't be
washed off. I couldn't see what was taking place inside the
burning area. But I was able to see the extent of the area
which was on fire. Based on the information which came
later, it seems that the center of the town suffered the
worst damage. The atomic bomb does not discriminate. Of
course, those who were fighting may have to suffer. But the
atomic bomb kills everyone from little babies to old people.
And it's not an easy death. It's a very cruel and very
painful way to die. I think that this cannot be allowed to
happen again anywhere in the world. I don't say this just
because I'm a Japanese atomic bomb survivor. I feel that
people all over the world must speak out.