
may peace prevail
After atrocity, the only thing that makes any sense is peace. Survivors of the August 6, 1945 nuclear bombing of Hiroshima have spent their lives dedicated to the abolishment of nuclear weapons, to educating succeeding generations about the horrors of war, to peace movements around the world. We do not hear of survivors from Hiroshima and Nagasaki (August 9, 1945) advocating a retaliation against the U.S. “Never Again” is the widespread mantra among survivors of atrocities worldwide: the Holocaust, the Rwandan genocide, the Nanjing massacre, to name a few.
Likewise, on a more individual level, the expression, “I wouldn’t wish that on my worst enemy” is used by those who have endured some form of extreme pain or hardship. It could be surviving an excruciating illness or a traumatic act of violence. Having experienced something so painful, the natural human response is compassion. I wouldn’t wish that on my worst enemy. We don’t go about scheming how to inflict similar suffering upon others simply because we’ve suffered ourselves. On the contrary, we seek to prevent similar experiences of suffering. Mothers Against Drunk Driving, March For Our Lives, Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, to name a few.
The only thing that makes any sense, is peace.
Many women, and #MeToo, have survived some form of domestic violence. Over my dead body, would I wish anyone the same experience—including the very man who committed the violence, including any perpetrator of violence, including, everyone. It never occurred to me to try to make the one who assaulted me suffer in some way. To respect my boundaries, my choices, my freedom—yes, to be held accountable—yes; but to inflict harm upon him—never. It simply is not worth it. What we do to others, we do to ourselves.
The only thing that makes sense is peace.
So what propels some of us to commit acts of violence? The answer ultimately is fear—its irrationality and ignorance. No wise sage ever, said, “Let’s bomb the @#¥%&! out of those weird people!”
For comfort, fear seeks control; for control, fear hordes power. The power and brilliance of the sun, hijacked and desecrated, by the hands of men gone mad. In a single blinding flash at 8:15 a.m. on August 6, 1945, a fifteen meter per second firestorm in the thousands of degrees celsius ripped through Hiroshima incinerating some one hundred and forty thousand lives. Three days later on August 9, at 11:02 a.m., repeat.
Why? Why, why… why… how…..
After atrocity, the only thing that makes any sense is peace.
Americans were scared of the “Japs”, and the Japanese were scared of the “foriegn devils”. In wartime, humans cease to be humane, seeing in one another only danger, forces of evil, and one’s own demise. Fear raises its monstrous head and slaughters everyone—indiscriminately. Everyone, every single one of us.
My American grandfather, in WWII frenzy, derided those Japs, his future family and his own descendants—his cute granddaughters who giggled in delight when sitting in his chair anticipating being lifted out by their doting grandfather who never tired of playing the same game.
Children, in their innocence, are wiser.
ONE Look into my eyes, and you will see a shadow of Hiroshima. You will see a dark room, illuminated by its single stream of WHITE light flowing from the humming projector as it reels GREY, WHITE, BLACK images onto a screen. You will see ten silent rows of seated people, formless figures in the darkness. And you will hear the rusty recording, as it comments on BLACK, WHITE, GREY images thrown onto the cold square screen: Atomic bomb “Little Boy” explodes at 8:15 a.m. August 6, 1945… Epicenter reaches several million degrees centigrade… ground temperature reaches 3,000 – 4,000 degrees centigrade… thirteen square kilometers completely destroyed… three hour firestorm with velocity of 15 meters per second… over one hundred and forty thousand deaths caused by “Little Boy”… (etcetera, etcetera, etcetera) b u t the ears of a small girl have forgotten sound listening only to naked terror run over the screen h e l l Her eyes stare wide open in innocence tainted with blood, as the screen throws daggers into her eyes. Daggers of broken, burnt and twisted bodies lay strewn across an old wooden floor. LOOK! s i l e n c e Pale white light reflects from the screen softly illuminates her tired eyes, her confusion, her small clenched fists. She tries with one fist, to grasp that “Little Boy” that Daddy’s country dropped, and she tries with the other fist, to grasp that firestorm that burned in Mommy’s country. But a life of six short years knew only how to reach One hand to hold her mother’s One hand to hold her father’s.
After atrocity, the only thing that makes any sense is peace.
The only thing that ever makes any sense, is peace.
Reclaim your innocence, like my grandfather did.
Chose love.
Be peace.
Peace, is a verb.
Peace.
May peace prevail on earth.
May peace prevail.