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Table of Contents | Downloadable/Printable Version CHAPTER SUMMARY AND NOTES CHAPTER THREE: Details Are Being Investigated Summary The third chapter covers the time from early evening on the day the bomb exploded to nine days later on August 15, 1945, when the Japanese Emperor announced on the radio JapanÂ’s surrender to the U.S. In these few days, the survivors in Hiroshima, along with Japanese scientists and government leaders, discovered that the bomb was a new type of weapon that split atoms. The authorities were cautious and vague in reporting details, and few in the city understood what little they were told. The survivors were for the most part focused on finding food, shelter, and medical care in this first week and a half of their misfortune. After being sent for by Father Kleinsorge, priests from the Novitiate outside the city came to Asano Park to evacuate two of the wounded Hiroshima priests. Father Kleinsorge waited in the park until the next day, when he too evacuated to the Novitiate after filling out a compensation claim for damage done to the mission. In the park he met two children by the surname Kataoka who had been separated from their mother and were quite distressed. Father Kleinsorge took them to the Novitiate as refugees and after several days of asking around, was finally able to reunite them with their mother. Before he left the park, he brought water to a group of men whose faces were wholly burned and whose eyes were melted and oozing. Father Kleinsorge reflected on how he used to become queasy at a simply cut finger but had changed so radically over the last day that he was able to help such gruesomely wounded people. Rev. Tanimoto remained in Asano Park for five days, assisting the wounded. He moved twenty weakened people to higher ground on the river sandpit, but the tide went even higher and he found them drowned the next morning. He was enraged that doctors had not come to treat the victims in the park. He finally went to find one and urged him to come to the park, but the doctor claimed his duty was to save the slightly wounded over the gravely wounded, who were surely doomed. Rev. Tanimoto was hounded by the woman who refused to cremate her dead baby until her husband could see it; she begged him to search for her husband but Rev. Tanimoto knew it would be impossible to find him. After he finally left the park, he was asked to come pray for a dying Mr. Tanaka who had been a rich and showy philanthropist, opposed to Rev. Tanimoto and his Christian teachings. Now, weak and humbled, Mr. Tanaka wanted comfort from religion. He died as Rev. Tanimoto read a psalm. At his familyÂ’s roofless house, Dr. Fujii examined himself to discover several fractured bones and cuts. He eventually moved to a friendÂ’s summer home to recuperate, and was visited by Father Cieslik from the Novitiate, at the urging of Father Kleinsorge. They drank whisky and discussed the disaster. Father Cieslik told the doctor and his host that he had heard from a reporter that the bomb was not a bomb at all but magnesium powder sprayed on the city, which exploded when it touched the power lines.
Dr. Sasaki tried to treat the wounded as best he could with limited medical supplies. Ten thousand had stormed the Red Cross Hospital, and he did not even have time to look outside at the bombÂ’s impact. Hundreds at a time died, but no one had the time to carry away the bodies. He and other staff worked by candlelight after dark, and finally tried to sneak in some sleep around three a.m. The wounded outside found them after just one hour and demanded help, however, and Dr. Sasaki was forced to work for two more days with just that one hour of sleep. Finally, a few more doctors and nurses arrived from other cities to help, but there were still just eight doctors for 10,000 wounded. Dr. Sasaki worried that his mother assumed him dead, and was permitted to return home to his motherÂ’s house in the countryside. There, he slept for 17 hours straight before returning to duty. When he came back, the hospital had begun to get organized, and he was able to classify his patients. Nurses began disposing of the dead, burning the bodies and preserving some of the ashes in carefully-marked envelopes for proper burial later. Miss Sasaki was left for two days and two nights under the makeshift awning with two grossly wounded companions. She went without food or water, and her broken leg became swollen and smelly. On the third day, friends found her and told her that her mother, father, and infant brother were surely dead since the hospital where they had been staying had been demolished. Finally, some men loaded her into a truck and she was transported to a military hospital on a nearby island. Luckily, she did not have gangrene and did not require amputation, but was running a very high fever. A few days later, she was moved again to a different hospital. It was several more days before a fracture specialist finally examined her. He decided he could not set her leg so merely drained the puss. Mrs. Nakamura and her children were evacuated to the Jesuit Novitiate after spending the night in Asano Park. They were each given a blanket and mosquito net, and recuperated with 50 other refugees. They had little appetite and vomited often. Her son, Toshio, began having nightmares after he heard that his hero, a young man named Hideo, had been burned alive in his factory. A few days later, still sick, they moved in with Mrs. NakamuraÂ’s sister-in-law in a nearby town. Though weak, Mrs. Nakamura traveled into the city to check on her relatives, and found them all dead. She was so affected by this discovery and the damage she had seen that she was speechless that evening. On August 15, Mrs. Nakamura heard from her sister that the Emperor had spoken on the radio and announced JapanÂ’s surrender. Table of Contents | Downloadable/Printable Version |