Peace Vigil, Los Alamos, NM, August 6, 2015 |
We are coming up on the 72nd Anniversary of the atomic bombings
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (August 6th and 9th). Which got me to thinking about
two years ago, on the 70th anniversary, when Michaela and I went to the annual Sackcloth and Ashes vigil in Los Alamos (where the original bomb was designed and made, and
continues to be a major laboratory complex for nuclear and conventional weapons
manufacture), protesting against the continual existence of the Los Alamos
National Laboratory (and all other laboratories and factories that include the
vast nuclear-industrial complex), keeping a nonviolent witness for those that
had suffered from the bombings, and, most importantly, through that witness
imagining the possibility of a universal nuclear weapons ban.
There was a rally at Ashley Pond, a park that rests on the
physical site where the original bomb was made, and then we walked up Trinity
Drive, towards the laboratory entrance. Most wore burlap, some covered
themselves with ashes. We sat for an hour on the sidewalk in silence before
heading back to the pond. Many cars drove by. Some honked in support. Some honked
and yelled in disgust or anger. Some - mostly the young - looked confused, having
no idea why we were there.
Most of the cars that drove by were probably driven by those
employed or related to those employed in some capacity by the Department of
Defense. They work at the laboratory. They make a good living. There is a lot
of money in weapons research. The county that contains Los Alamos is one of the
richest counties in the United States. The county that houses the Santa Clara Pueblo
in the valley below is the second poorest county in the nation. It's clear
where our priorities lie.
While sitting on the sidewalk, I began to think about how
little I knew about the decision- making process over the dropping of that
first nuclear bomb. I have, for the most part, focused on the consequences of
the bomb - and the economic and environmental devastation left in the wake of the
nuclear-industrial complex. Since that vigil two years ago, I've read about the
history of the making of the first nuclear bomb and the factors that went into
using it on Hiroshima and Nagasaki - and discovered how that history has had a
direct influence on how the US views its nuclear arsenal today - and has helped
shape conventional military strategy and thinking. I'll be posting some of that
information in the next few posts.
But first…
Hope?
A Global Treaty to
Ban Nuclear Weapons
UN Treaty Negotiations, 2017 |
There was very little coverage of this event in the US
media. So, here's a little more detail from a Guardian article:
“'It’s a prohibition in line with other prohibitions on
weapons of mass destruction,' said Beatrice Fihn at the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons in
Geneva. 'We banned biological weapons 45 years ago, we banned chemical weapons
25 years ago, and today we are banning nuclear weapons.' Within two years the
treaty could have the 50-state ratifications that it needs to enter into
international law, she said.
"Previous UN treaties have been effective even when key
nations have failed to sign up to them. The US did not sign up to the landmines
treaty, but has completely aligned its landmines policy to comply nonetheless.
'These kinds of treaties have an impact that forces countries to change their
behavior. It is not going to happen fast, but it does affect them,' Fihn said.
'We have seen on all other weapons that prohibition comes first, and then
elimination. This is taking the first step towards elimination.'” (Treaty
Banning Nuclear Weapons Approved, The Guardian, July 7, 2017)
It's a given that the nuclear powers would not sign this
treaty - who wants to give up such power? - but the treaty is a step in the
right direction. If only giving voice to the desire to eliminate the threat of
nuclear annihilation. Especially now that nuclear weapons are back on the menu,
what with all the nuclear saber rattling between North Korea and the US.
***
Next: A Poem by Tōge Sankichi,
activist, poet, survivor of the atomic bomb
activist, poet, survivor of the atomic bomb
***
(Original Child Bomb is a mistranslation of the Japanese term
for the atom bomb, genshi bakudan. Genshi, which means "atom," contains
root characters which, when rendered individually, can possibly mean
"original" and "child." There is a Thomas Merton poem and a
documentary of the same name. It was supposed for years that this was the literal translation of atom bomb because the Japanese saw it as the first of its kind. As far as I can tell, original child bomb was never used by the
Japanese - and yet it seems to contain, in English - because of it's strange and innocent distance from the horrors of the explosion and its aftermath - a more appropriately ominous and terrifying feel than "atom bomb.")
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