News

On the 80th anniversary of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Jordan Dunbar hears from the only people to have ever ...
Fire and Ash, but he’s already planning his next big film. This time, he’s turning away from the world of Pandora and ...
A high school in Hiroshima showed 15 new artworks that depicted the atomic bombing, such as a horror-stricken girl surrounded ...
Last year, the Japan Confederation of A- and H-Bomb Sufferers Organizations, also known as Nihon Hidankyo, won the Nobel ...
The trailer for the book "Ghosts of Hiroshima," narrated by Martin Sheen, is here. It will be made into a film by James ...
Jorgen Watne Frydnes, chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, during a visit Tuesday to Hiroshima stressed that the ...
Japan's Crown Prince and Princess Akishino have visited Hiroshima ahead of the 80th anniversary of the atomic bombing of the ...
A photograph authentically shows a centuries-old bonsai tree that survived the U.S. bombing of Hiroshima in World War II.
In Japan, where the youth understand war only through history books or in news headlines, a unique experience aims to promote ...
Dozens of times a year, Rebun Kayo takes a ferry to a small island across from the port of Hiroshima in search of the remains of those killed by the atomic bomb 80 years ago.
Seventy years ago, John Hersey's unflinching magazine article about the atomic bombing of Hiroshima rocked the world. Peter Curran explores the story and impact of Hersey's work. Show more On a ...
On my way to Hilliard, I carried my copy of John Hersey’s “Hiroshima.” (My 1989 edition bears the cover endorsement “Everyone able to read should read it,” and I agree.) ...