P.O. Box 81, Swarthmore, PA, 19081-- brandywine@juno.com (610) 544-1818
AUGUST 6 & 9, 2007
Hiroshima Day '07 Demonstration
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On August 6, 1945 the United States dropped the first atomic bomb on
the city of Hiroshima, Japan, killing an estimated 150,000 people
in the immediate blast and fire. Three day later, on August 9, 1945,
more than 75,000 people died in the blast and fire resulting from the
U.S. atomic bombing of Nagasaki, Japan. More than 100,000
people died in the days and years ahead, and continue to die,
from the radioactive poisoning of the first atomic bombings.
In Valley Forge, Lockheed Martin, among other Pentagon
contracts, produces fire control systems for Tomahawk cruise
missiles as well as battlefield computers used in the U.S. war of
occupation in Iraq
Hiroshima Day 2007, Remembrance and Resistance
At 8:15AM, a siren blast signalled the 62nd Anniversary of the
atomic bombing of Hiroshima and the start of a vigil of
remembrance in front of the Valley Forge weapons complex of
Lockheed Martin. The siren blast was followed by the tolling of a
bell sixty-two times, once for each of the past sixty-two years of war,
war economy, and the terror posed by the existence and threatened
use of nuclear weapons. The vigil continued in front of Lockheed
Martin which, as the world's largest weapons corporation, the U.S.'s
chief nuclear bomb contractor, and the Iraq war's chief profiteer,
incorporates the continuation and legacy of sixty-two years of war
and nuclear weapons.
The vigil of remembrance continued until noon, with hourly siren
blasts and bell-tolling sixty-two times.
The vigil moved to the driveway entrance of Lockheed Martin, with
large blue Lockheed Martin logo signs on both sides of the drive.
Again, a siren blast, followed by a reading of the account of the
Hiroshima bombing from the "Journey of Death" narrative published
by the Brandywine Peace Community for the 50th Anniversary of the
bombing of Hiroshima. Following the reading of the Hiroshima
bombing account, Ms Yuko Nakamura, a survivor of the Hiroshima
bombing, an "Hibakusha", spoke. A thirteen year old school girl at
the time of the time of bombing, her words convey what most of us
can only best imagine in nightmares. Nakamura-san now travels
the world, as Secretary-General of Kanagawa Atomic Bomb
Sufferers Association speaking for peace and the abolition of
nuclear weapons.
Fittingly, a "Die-in", dramatizing the unimaginable, followed on black
coffin cloths in front of the Lockheed Martin logo sign. Nearby stood
a full-size black coffin with white masks, pictures of the aftermath of
the first atomic bombing, and draped with colorful strands of paper
peace cranes. People then arose to the sound of music and walked
a few feet to another part of the Lockheed Martin site forming a
chain of remembrance and resistance to Lockheed Martin.
Following the Hiroshima Day '07 litany and a statement "Declaring
Peace at Lockheed Martin" (see below), one by one, those prepared
to face arrest for civil disobedience exited the line, walking onto
Lockheed Martin, strewing handfuls of sunflower seeds: "The
sunflower has become a world-wide symbol for peace, carrying the
hope of a world free of nuclear weapons and war... Today, we recall
the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and, with
sunflower seeds, we plant our hopes here at Lockheed Martin for
peace and justice."
Eleven people were arrested - Tom Mullian, Media, PA; Mary Jo
McArthur, Beth Friedlan, Vinton Deming, and Bernadette Cronin-
Geller, all of Philadelphia; Rev. Patrick Sieber, Camden, NJ, and
Jackie Baumann, Elmwood Park, NJ; Rich Conti, Rutledge, PA;
Theresa Camerota, Wyncote, PA; and Robert M. Smith,
Swarhmore, PA. - cited and releases on "Disorderly Conduct"
citations.
Color photos of the Hiroshima Day Demonstration appeared in the
Phila. Daily News. There was also coverage on WCAU-TV and it
was the lead report for a while on KYW-All News Radio.
August 9, 2007 - Nagasaki Day Peace Dedication
Organized by: Brandywine Peace Community; Co-sponsored by:
Catholic Peace Fellowship & Northwest [Phila.] Greens
August 9, 1945, Atomic Bombing of Nagasaki, Japan;
Ground Zero: the Urakami Roman Catholic Cathedral
August 9, 2007, Nagasaki Day Dedication at SS Peter & Paul
Roman Catholic Cathedral in Philadelphia
As people stood on and before the steps of the SS Peter & Paul
Roman Catholic Cathedral in Phila., a siren blasted recalling the
sirens of that morning 62 years ago when the largest Catholic
Cathedral in all of Asia, in the city of the largest Catholic population
in all of Asia, was ground zero for the 2nd atomic bombing.
[Relative to the Hiroshima bomb (nicknamed "Little Boy) dropped
three days earlier, the bomb that exploded above the Urakami
suburb of Nagasaki was the more powerful plutonium bomb,
nicknamed "Fat Man" after British prime minister Winston Churchill.
The plane carrying "Fat Man" took off from Tinian Island with the
primary target of Kokura. Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and Kokura had all
been "saved" (from earlier U.S. carpet and fire bombings) for the
planned atomic bombings.
On the morning of August 9, ground haze and smoke fully obscured
Kokura, so the plane's pilot, Major Charles W. Sweeney, decided to"make a run down to Nagasaki [the mission's secondary target] as
there was no sense dragging the bomb home or dropping it in the
ocean". At 11:02AM, "Fat Man" dropped from the B-29 and
exploded 1,650 feet above the city.]
In front of Philadelphia's SS Peter & Paul Cathedral, a large bell
tolled 62 times as people stood in silent reflective memory of 62
years of war and nuclear weapons. Readings on "the Cost of War,
the Price of Peace" followed as did a Litany of Water, Healing, &
Peace (see below).
Incense burned in homage to all the victims of war and ceremonially
people were invited to a basin, on the base of which were river rocks
and stones, a piece of wood, and a dome shaped stone. Water (a
symbol of healing, cleansing, and re-juvenation) was poured over
the hands of participants and the basin-filled representation of the
Urakami Cathedral and the port city of Nagasaki.
The Nagasaki Day Peace Dedication ended with Tom Mullian
leading people his song "We Declare Peace".
Hiroshima Day 07 Litany
Reader: On July 16, 1945, the first atomic bomb test, code-named
Trinity, took place in an area of desert in New Mexico called
Jornada del Muerto Journey of Death. J. Robert Oppenheimer,
the scientific director of the Manhattan Project which developed the
first atomic bombs, remembered the passage from the Hindu
Scripture, the Bhagavad Gita: Now I am become death, the
destroyer of worlds. Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 3 weeks later,
foretold the world that we know and the society that weve become.
The trail of nuclear weapons, militarism and war, invasions and
occupations, empire and the corporate domination of the economy
and our democracy, brings us to where war is made today:
Lockheed Martin.
All: Hiroshima/Nagasaki, Never Again; Stop Lockheed Martin;
We Declare Peace
Reader: On August 6, 1945, the first atomic bomb was dropped on
the city of Hiroshima. The thermal flash and blast started fires
which very quickly became a firestorm until the whole city was
ablaze. Birds ignited in midair. People ran to the rivers to escape
and soon the river became not a stream of flowing water but a
stream of drifting dead bodies. Despite every horrifying statistic of
violence and war weve ever heard, the account, statistics, and
memory of that day 62 years ago are still devastating. 60 percent of
the city is destroyedhospitals, hotels, rail stations, temples,
factories, houses, and scores of other buildings reduced to flaming
rubble. The next morning the sun rose and revealed the dawning of
the nuclear age. Where the city once stood, was a wasteland of
ashes and ruin. Three days later, Nagasaki.
All: Hiroshima/Nagasaki, Never Again; Stop Lockheed Martin;
We Declare Peace
Reader: Sixty-two years of nuclear weapons and their threatened
use have emboldened and outlined every imperial move of the U.S.
from Vietnam to Central America to the Persian Gulf. The U.S.
continues to maintain an arsenal of 10,000 nuclear weapons
deployed on land, sea, and in the air, at a cost of $27 billion
annually and the Bush Administration is now pushing Complex
2030 for the streamlining and re-juvenation of future nuclear
weapons design and production. Called Complex 2030 because of
the nuclear weapons industrys plan, with Lockheed Martin at the
core, be in place within the next 25 years. Whole populations and
lands have been contaminated with the toxic effects of nuclear
weapons productionplutonium, which fuels nuclear bombs, has a
toxic life of 240,000 years or 10,000 human generations. So too, the
very principle of democracy and commitment to civil liberties has
been contaminated by our societys reliance on war and the
militarization of culture, economy, and law.
All: Hiroshima/Nagasaki, Never Again; Stop Lockheed Martin;
We Declare Peace
Reader: The U.S. military budget this year will exceed a half
trillion dollars. Many suffer, so very, very few may profit.
Lockheed Martin, the worlds largest weapons corporation, the
U.S.s #1 worldwide arms supplier, the U.S.s chief nuclear bomb
contractor, the Iraq wars chief profiteer - is quite simply making a
killing in war. The fire control systems for Tomahawk cruise
missiles repeatedly launched from Lockheed Martin Aegis warships
throughout the Gulf Wars are produced by Lockheed Martin right
here as are the battlefield computer used daily in the Iraq war of
occupation, now in its 4th year In every war lies the threat of
another Hiroshima or Nagasaki. Lockheed Martin is built atop the
ashes of the nuclear age and the continuing wars and global nuclear
reach of the U.S. military empire. Lockheed Martin profits, at the
expense of human needs and the promise of justice. In memory of
all victims of the past 62 years of war and nuclear terror, we cry out
for peace and a future worthy of our hopes and our
childreneducation, homes, health care for all, justice, an honoring
of the earth, peace. All: Hiroshima/Nagasaki, Never Again;
Stop Lockheed Martin; We Declare Peace
Declaring Peace at Lockheed Martin
Ten years had passed since the day the Bomb was dropped on the city of
Hiroshima. In 1955, a thirteen year old Japanese girl named Sadako
Sasaki died of radiation-induced leukemia. She was one of thousands of
children in Hiroshima to suffer the radioactive after-effects that have kept
killing weeks, months, years, decades, after August 6, 1945. During her
illness Sadako folded paper cranes wishing for recovery from the fatal
disease. She knew the story which says that cranes live a thousand years
and that the person who folds a thousand paper cranes will have their
wish granted. Sadako folded 644 paper cranes before she died. Her
classmates folded 356 more cranes so Sadako could be buried with a
thousand cranes. A monument was built in the Hiroshima Peace Park to
honor the childs memory and each year on Hiroshima Day children
throughout Japan adorn it with thousands of brightly colored paper
cranes. The monument to Sadako Sasaki reads: This is our cry, this is
our prayer, Peace in the world.
The sunflower has become a worldwide symbol for peace, carrying the
hope of a world free of nuclear weapons and war. We claim for peace the
land on which Lockheed Martin sits. We seek to reclaim our country for
peace and the promise of justice and democracy. We seek to reclaim a
determined hope for a world free of nuclear weapons and war. Today, we
join hands and declare peace in front of Lockheed Martin. Today, we
recall the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and, with
sunflower seeds, we plant our hopes here at Lockheed Martin for peace
and for justice.
All: Hiroshima/Nagasaki, Never Again; Stop Lockheed Martin;
We Declare Peace
Litany of Water, Healing & Peace
Response: [all] May the healing waters of peace roll over us as
we toll the bell of peace
In Remembrance of the Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, 62 years of war and nuclear weapons, and amidst the
seas of war, violence, disaster, and neglect that swirl around us
today; we yearn for the healing waters of peace...[all]
For vibrant lives suddenly and shamelessly taken from the
community of family and loved ones...[all]
For the lives that continue, haunted forever by the pain of absence,
and the nightmare images forever seared into our memories...[all]
For empire and all the deaths due to the arrogance of patriotism,
religious or ideological fanaticism, and indifference to the world
and human need...[all]
For reconciliation amongst all peoples... [all]
For the care of children and the earth... [all]
For the violence of poverty and the wounding of body and spirit
resulting from racial, religious, and sexual hatred...[all]
For our societys addiction to oil, weapons, and war-making... [all]
That we may end war and the occupation of Iraq, abolish nuclear
weapons, resist the war economy and beat swords into plowshares,
care for the victims of violence, disaster, and hatred; That we may
see the possibilities of justice and peace, always clinging to the
Promise of Peace... [all]