Atom bomb survivor hopes Japan debut of 'Oppenheimer' will stoke nuclear
debate
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[March 08, 2024]
By Tom Bateman
HIROSHIMA (Reuters) - Teruko Yahata was eight when she saw a blueish-white
light envelop the sky over her home city of Hiroshima one summer
morning, moments before the first atomic bomb explosion knocked her
unconscious and leveled swathes of the Japanese city.
Now 86, she is eager to be among the first to see the film "Oppenheimer"
at its delayed opening in Japan on March 29, hoping the biopic of the
scientist who led the development of the bomb will reinvigorate debate
over nuclear weapons.
"I don't hold a grudge against Mr Oppenheimer himself or anything like
that. It's a much bigger issue," said Yahata, who often speaks on behalf
of survivors of the nuclear blasts in the cities of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki at the end of World War Two.
"I think it's important for the Oppenheimer film to be screened in
Japan, so we can learn from it and not lose that awareness that we need
to preserve a future for our loved ones."
The film about atomic bomb pioneer J. Robert Oppenheimer, directed by
Christopher Nolan, is expected to win numerous Oscars at next week's
Academy Awards, having already grossed nearly $1 billion since its
opening in July 2023.
But Japan was initially left out of plans for the worldwide screening.
The opening in late summer came just weeks before solemn memorials in
Hiroshima and Nagasaki held annually to mark the bombings that claimed
more than 200,000 lives.
Some critics said the film glossed over the human cost in Japan. And
many Japanese were offended by a grassroots marketing campaign yoking
the film to "Barbie," another blockbuster that opened around the same
time, with fan-produced pictures of the films' stars alongside images of
nuclear blasts.
A #NoBarbenheimer hashtag trended online in Japan, prompting an apology
from "Barbie" distributor Warner Bros.
Bitters End, a Japanese distributor of independent films, eventually
picked up "Oppenheimer" and set the opening date of March 29. Neither
Bitters End nor global distributor Universal Pictures responded to
requests for comment.
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Teruko Yahata (86), a World War Two Hiroshima atomic bombing
survivor, speaks about her story of the horrors of Hiroshima to
foreign visitors at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum in
Hiroshima, western Japan May 9, 2023. REUTERS/Tom Bateman/File Photo
The only nation to have suffered
atomic bombings, Japan has led global efforts to abolish the
weapons. The issue took on renewed resonance in 2022, with Russia's
invasion of Ukraine and nuclear saber-rattling by Russian President
Vladimir Putin.
Yahata, one of a dwindling number of "hibakusha", as survivors of
the nuclear explosion are known, waited until late in life to give
witness to her experience on the morning of Aug. 6, 1945, and the
horrors that followed.
She took English lessons to better tell her story to foreign
visitors at the bomb museum and monuments in Hiroshima. She recounts
glimpsing the blast as she stepped into her family's garden, a
moment before its force knocked her back six meters.
"The entire sky flashed and was illuminated in bluish white, as if
the heavens had become a huge fluorescent light," Yahata has said in
her testimony.
Thinking about the process of making the bomb and the decision to
drop it on her home sends shivers down her spine, Yahata said, but
she feels a degree of empathy for Oppenheimer and his team.
"It must have weighed heavily on their consciences," she said.
"Oppenheimer probably understood better than anyone what a terrible
thing would result from the creation of atomic weapons."
(Reporting by Tom Bateman in Hiroshima; Writing and additional
reporting by Rocky Swift in Tokyo; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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