All Videos Tagged Allied-war-crimes (Tulsa Peace Fellowship) - Tulsa Peace Fellowship2024-05-12T16:33:38Zhttp://tulsapeacefellowship.ning.com/video/video/listTagged?tag=Allied-war-crimes&rss=yes&xn_auth=noHibakusha choir - Nagasaki Peace Memorial Ceremony 2008 Japantag:tulsapeacefellowship.ning.com,2012-08-09:2567841:Video:226072012-08-09T17:30:49.559ZTony Nusplhttp://tulsapeacefellowship.ning.com/profile/TonyNuspl
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</a> <br></br>vocabulary: HIBAKUSHA : The surviving victims of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki are called hibakusha (被爆者?), a Japanese word that literally translates to "explosion-affected people". Many victims were Japanese who still live in Japan, but several thousand, Japanese and non-Japanese, live abroad in Korea, the United States,…
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</a><br />vocabulary: HIBAKUSHA : The surviving victims of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki are called hibakusha (被爆者?), a Japanese word that literally translates to "explosion-affected people". Many victims were Japanese who still live in Japan, but several thousand, Japanese and non-Japanese, live abroad in Korea, the United States, Brazil and elsewhere.<br />
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an excerpt from “In My Lifetime” film by Robert E. Frye Sumner Jules Glimcher's Hiroshima-Nagasaki, August, 1945tag:tulsapeacefellowship.ning.com,2011-08-08:2567841:Video:132652011-08-08T20:30:28.880ZTony Nusplhttp://tulsapeacefellowship.ning.com/profile/TonyNuspl
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</a> <br></br>First screened at the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) in New York, in summer of 1968, "Hiroshima-Nagasaki 1945" proved to be a sketchy but quite moving document of the aftermath of the bombing, captured in grainy but often startling black and white images: shadows of objects or people burned into walls, ruins of schools, miles of razed landscape…
<a href="http://tulsapeacefellowship.ning.com/video/sumner-jules-glimcher-s-hiroshima-nagasaki-august-1945"><br />
<img src="http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/2511172766?profile=original&width=240&height=180" width="240" height="180" alt="Thumbnail" /><br />
</a><br />First screened at the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) in New York, in summer of 1968, "Hiroshima-Nagasaki 1945" proved to be a sketchy but quite moving document of the aftermath of the bombing, captured in grainy but often startling black and white images: shadows of objects or people burned into walls, ruins of schools, miles of razed landscape viewed from the roof of a building. Although YouTube links to only 3:23 minutes, there were 16 minutes of film, excerpted from 160 minutes of raw footage.