the courtyard by Kei Yoshimizu
Old house, Onomichi, Hiroshima, Japan. Photography by Yasuhiro Sakuda on 500px
Onomichi by ubic from tokyo
Via Flickr:
広島県 尾道
Onomichi, Hiroshima Prefecture
SONY RX1
Itsukushima Shrine : Miyajima, Hiroshima, Japan / Japón (von Lost in Japan, by Miguel Michán)
Christer Strömholm
Brighter than a thousand suns. Eyes that saw the Hiroshima nuclear blast. Japan, August 8, 1945.
الصورة تم التقاطها على الفور بعد إسقاط هيروشيما وناجازاكي على اليابان، ويظهر فيها شقيقان، الاخ الاكبر يحمل على ظهره أخيه الأصغر، الذي مات للتو، ويتوجه به لمحرقة جثث الموتى، وفق تقاليد اليابان، ولكن الملامح التى اعتلت وجه الطفل تعكس فخره بأخيه الأصغر البريء الذي سقط للتو.
The picture was taken immediately after the overthrow of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, and shows where the two brothers, big brother carries on the back of his younger brother, who just died, and going by the holocaust of dead bodies, according to the traditions of Japan, but the features that sailed high over the child’s face reflects his pride in his youngest brother innocent who just fell.
厳島神社 -Light up- /Miya-jima Itsukushima Shrine, Hiroshima , Japan by tyodai on Flickr
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Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum
shows results of the insane inhumane atomic bomb attack against Hiroshima city on August 6th, 1945 which killed more than 300,000 people.
Every city mayor of Hiroshima has been sending the Letter of Protest to each nuclear test around the globe, which the copies were exhibited on the wall of the Museum.
I cried when I saw the heavily burnt child’s tricycle, when you realize the owner had absolutely no chance to survive the nuclear radiation and heat.
Not pleasant, but it is a must visit place for everyone in the world.
I’ve been here before and it is truly heartbreaking.
Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum
shows results of the insane inhumane atomic bomb attack against Hiroshima city on August 6th, 1945 which killed more than 300,000 people.
Every city mayor of Hiroshima has been sending the Letter of Protest to each nuclear test around the globe, which the copies were exhibited on the wall of the Museum.
I cried when I saw the heavily burnt child’s tricycle, when you realize the owner had absolutely no chance to survive the nuclear radiation and heat.
Not pleasant, but it is a must visit place for everyone in the world.
