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Michigan Post > Blog > World > This man survived Hiroshima – and he has a stark warning for us all
World

This man survived Hiroshima – and he has a stark warning for us all

By Editorial Board Published August 6, 2025 7 Min Read
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This man survived Hiroshima – and he has a stark warning for us all

Toshiyuki Mimaki is exhausted after we meet him.

The 83-year-old sinks into his chair, closes his eyes, and asks us to maintain it temporary.

However then he begins speaking, and his age appears to soften away with the facility of his tales.

He’s a survivor of Hiroshima’s atomic bomb, a lifelong advocate for nuclear disarmament and, as of final yr, a Nobel Peace Prize winner.

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3:38

‘Why do these animals like conflict a lot?’

However now, on the eightieth anniversary of the bombing, he comes with extra than simply recollections – he has a message, and it’s stark.

“Right now is the most dangerous era,” he says.

“Russia might use it [a nuclear weapon], North Korea might use it, China might use it.

“And President Trump – he is simply an enormous mess.

“We’ve been appealing and appealing, for a world without war or nuclear weapons – but they’re not listening.”

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Donald Trump. Pic: AP

2:23

Trump points nuclear sub order

‘I did not hear a sound’

Mr Mimaki was three years outdated when the US dropped an atomic bomb on the town of Hiroshima.

It was the primary time a nuclear weapon had been utilized in conflict, and it is remembered as one of the vital horrific occasions within the historical past of battle.

It is estimated to have killed over 70,000 individuals on the spot, one in each 5 residents, unleashing a floor warmth of round 4,000C, melting the whole lot in its path and flattening two thirds of the town.

Horrifying tales trickled out slowly, of blackened corpses and pores and skin hanging off the victims like rags.

“What I remember is that day I was playing outside and there was a flash,” Mr Mimaki remembers.

“We were 17km away from the hypocentre. I didn’t hear a bang, I didn’t hear a sound, but I thought it was lightening.

“Then it was afternoon and other people began popping out in droves. Some with their hair all in mess, garments ragged, some sporting footwear, some not sporting footwear, and asking for water.”

Hiroshima Survivor Toshiyuki Mimak, 83, speaks to Sky News

Picture:
Toshiyuki Mimak

‘The town was now not there’

For 4 days, his father didn’t return house from work within the metropolis centre. He describes with emotion the journey taken by his mom, with him and his youthful trouble in tow, to attempt to discover him.

There was solely to date in they may journey, the destruction was just too nice.

“My father came home on the fourth day,” he says.

“He was in the basement [at his place of work]. He was changing into his work clothes. That’s how he survived.

“When he got here as much as floor degree, the town of Hiroshima was now not there.”

‘People are still suffering’

Three days later, the US would drop another atomic bomb on the city of Nagasaki, bringing about an unconditional Japanese surrender and the end of the Second World War.

By the end of 1945, the death toll from both cities would have risen to an estimated 210,000 and to this day it is not known exactly how many lost their lives in the following years to cancers and other side effects.

“It is nonetheless taking place, even now. Individuals are nonetheless affected by radiation, they’re within the hospital,” Mr Mimaki says.

“It’s extremely simple to get most cancers, I’d even get most cancers, that is what I am fearful about now.”

-FILE PHOTO MARCH 1946 - This general view of the city of Hiroshima showing damage wrought by the atomic bomb was taken March 1946, six months after the bomb was dropped August 6, 1945. The 50th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and the end of World War II is August 1995

Picture:
This picture reveals the town in March 1946, six months after the atomic bomb was dropped on 6 August 1945. Pic: Reuters

Tragically, many caught up within the bomb lived with the stigma for many of their lives. Misunderstandings in regards to the impression of radiation meant they have been typically shunned and rejected for jobs or as a companion in marriage.

Many due to this fact tried to cover their standing as Hibakusha (an individual affected by the atomic bombs) and now, in older age, are discovering it laborious to say the monetary help they’re entitled to.

After which there may be the big psychological scars, the PTSD and the lifelong psychological well being issues. Many Hibakusha selected to by no means speak about what they noticed that day and reside with the guilt that they survived.

For Mr Mimaki, it is there when he recounts a narrative of how he and one other younger woman about his age turned sick with what he now believes was radiation poisoning.

“She died, and I survived,” he says with a heavy sigh and pressure in his eyes.

He has subsequently devoted his life to advocacy, and is co-chair of a bunch of atomic bomb survivors known as Nihon Hidankyo. Its members have been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2024.

Pic: Reuters

Picture:
The town is marking 80 years because the blast. Pic: Reuters

‘Why do people like conflict a lot?’

However he doesn’t dwell a lot on any delight he may really feel. He is aware of it isn’t lengthy till the bomb fades from dwelling reminiscence, and he deeply fears what that may imply in a world that appears extra turbulent now than it has in a long time.

Certainly, regardless of advocacy like his, there are nonetheless round 12,000 nuclear warheads on this planet within the palms of 9 international locations.

“In the future, you never know when they might use it. Russia-Ukraine, Israel-Gaza, Israel-Iran – there is always a war going on somewhere,” he says.

“Why do these animals called humans like war so much?

“We hold saying it, we hold telling them, but it surely’s not getting by way of, for 80 years no-one has listened.

“We are Hibakusha, my message is we must never create Hibakusha again.”

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