Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Tsutomu Yamaguchi: The Man Who Survived Two Atomic Bombs
Episode Date: May 26, 2023There were millions of stories that came out of the second world war. However, there were none like that of Tsutomu Yamaguchi. On August 6, 1945, he survived an event that no one in world history ha...d encountered before. Just three days later, he had the misfortune of having to go through it again. Learn more about Tsutomu Yamaguchi, the man who survived not one but two atomic bombs, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors BetterHelp is an online platform that provides therapy and counseling services to individuals in need of mental health support. The platform offers a range of communication methods, including chat, phone, and video sessions with licensed and accredited therapists who specialize in different areas, such as depression, anxiety, relationships, and more. Get 10% off your first month at BetterHelp.com/Everywhere ButcherBox is the perfect solution for anyone looking to eat high-quality, sustainably sourced meat without the hassle of going to the grocery store. With ButcherBox, you can enjoy a variety of grass-fed beef, heritage pork, free-range chicken, and wild-caught seafood delivered straight to your door every month. Visit ButcherBox.com/Daily to get 10% off and free chicken thighs for a year. InsideTracker provides a personal health analysis and data-driven wellness guide to help you add years to your life—and life to your years. Choose a plan that best fits your needs to get your comprehensive biomarker analysis, customized Action Plan, and customer-exclusive healthspan resources. For a limited time, Everything Everywhere Daily listeners can get 20% off InsideTracker’s new Ultimate Plan. Visit InsideTracker.com/eed. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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There were millions of stories that came out of the Second World War.
However, there were none like that of Stomu Yamaguchi.
On August 6, 1945, he survived an event that no one in world history had encountered before.
And just three days later, he had the misfortune of going through it again.
Learn more about Stomu Yamaguchi, the man who survived not one, but two atomic bombs,
on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
Do you ever climb into bed ready to sleep, only to have your mind start racing the moment
your head hits the pillow? Thoughts bouncing around, replaying the day or jumping ahead to tomorrow?
That is exactly why Catherine Nikolai created Nothing Much Happens. Each episode is a gentle, cozy
bedtime story where, well, nothing much happens. No drama, no tension, nothing you need to follow
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around the world use it every night to quiet their thoughts and finally fall asleep.
If you've ever struggled to shut your brain off at night, this might be exactly what you've
been missing. You can listen to Nothing Much Happens wherever you get your podcasts.
Episodes are every Monday and Thursday. The dropping of the atomic bombs on the cities of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki were two of the biggest events of the 20th century. They simultaneously ended
the world's most horrific war, entered the world into an era of nuclear weapons, and lest we forget,
killed somewhere in the neighborhood of 130 to 226,000 people.
The story of the decision to use these weapons is for another episode.
In this episode, I want to focus on the story of a single individual,
a man who was one of the few to have experienced the horrors of both Hiroshima and Nagasaki
firsthand.
Stomo Yamaguchi was born in Nagasaki in 1916.
He was the middle of five children born into a farming family.
However, he showed great aptitude and was admitted to the Mugiyama National School in Nagasaki
and then entered the Nagasaki Technical College, where he studied naval engineering.
After graduation, he got a job with Mitsubishi Industries designing ships.
He worked for Mitsubishi throughout the war as a ship designer, a position that was able to keep him out of the military during the war.
In the summer of 1945, he was assigned to work on the development of a new type of oil tanker.
Early in the summer, he left his wife and infant son in Nagasaki to work.
on the project in the city of Hiroshima for three months. August 6th, 1945, was scheduled to be his last
day in Hiroshima. He was going to return to his family from whom he had been separated. He woke early
and made his way to the Hiroshima train station with two of his work colleagues, who were also from
Nagasaki. However, along the way, Yamaguchi realized that he had forgotten his hunko, which is a type
of identification card. At 8.15 a.m. he was walking to his office at the Hiroshima docks when he claimed
to have noticed something in the sky. He saw a single American B-29 bomber flying overhead that
dropped something attached to a parachute. Just moments later, as he described it, there was, quote,
a great flash in the sky, and I was blown over. Yamagushi described the light as if it were a giant
magnesium flare. The massive burst of light caused him to dive into a nearby ditch for safety, which
probably saved his life, because just moments later, he in the surrounding area was hit by a massive
shockwave. The shockwave was so powerful that it literally picked Yamaguchi up and threw him out of the
ditch and into a nearby potato field. He passed out for a while, how long he didn't know, but when he woke up,
everything around him had changed. As he described it, quote, I think I fainted for a while. When I
opened my eyes, everything was dark and I couldn't see much. It was like the start of a film at the
cinema before the picture has begun when the blank frames are just flashing up without any sound,
end quote. The reason why there was no sound is that the shock waves had burst both of his eardrums.
The reason why he couldn't see much is because he was temporarily blinded.
There was dirt that was kicked up by the explosion as well as ash now falling down everywhere.
When he regained his vision, he saw a massive mushroom-shaped cloud growing in the sky.
Moreover, he suffered serious burns on both his face and forearms.
He had no idea what had just happened.
What he didn't realize was that the world's first atomic bomb had just been dropped 1.9 miles or 3 kilometers away.
Despite his injuries, he managed to get himself to an air raid shelter located nearby.
After resting for a bit, he decided to find his colleagues who he was going to travel to Nagasaki with.
And surprisingly, he found them both alive.
The three men made their way to another air raid shelter where they spent the night with other survivors,
still having no clue what happened to everything around them.
The next morning, August 7th, other survivors told the men that, incredibly, the train station was still operating.
So the two men set off on foot to get to the train station so they could go home to Nagasaki.
The three men found a city that had been instantly transformed.
There was death and destruction all around them.
Buildings were gone, and the remains of the dead could be seen everywhere.
All of the bridges across the rivers in the city had also been destroyed, which proved to be a problem for the men.
they would have to swim across the river to get to the train station.
The river, however, was filled with bodies, blackened, burned bodies of men, women, and children, many of whom were stuck together.
Yamaguchi and his friends swam across the river through the mass of floating dead bodies to get to the other side.
It was a horrific memory that stuck with Yamaguchi for the rest of his life.
By the time they reached the train station, they found that the rumors were actually true.
There were trains that were functioning.
So they joined the mass of people, most of whom were suffering from burns like themselves,
and got themselves on the overnight train to Nagasaki.
When he arrived in Nagasaki on August 8th, the first thing he did was go to see a doctor who had been
one of his classmates.
Yamaguchi's burns were so severe that the doctor at first couldn't even recognize him.
The doctor treated him and bandaged his wounds, which covered most of the upper half of his body.
He returned to his family who, like the doctor, didn't even recognize him at first.
Yamaguchi's story of what happened in Hiroshima was news to everyone in Nagasaki.
They hadn't heard anything about it as it hadn't been reported in detail in the media yet.
What mentioned there was of it said nothing more than there was an American attack on the city.
For example, the English language newspaper, The Japan Times, published the following short statement in their August 8th edition.
Quote, Hiroshima was attacked by a small number of super forts at 8.20 a.m. Monday.
The enemy dropped explosives and incendiaries.
Damage is now being investigated.
End quote.
That was the level of information that most people in Japan had just two or three days after the events in Hiroshima.
The next morning, Thursday, August 9, 1945, despite being barely able to move, Stomu Yamaguchi showed up for work.
His superiors at the Mitsubishi Corporation wanted to report.
At 11 a.m., he found himself in a meeting with a company director trying to explain what had
happened in Hiroshima. As far as Yamaguchi could tell, there was a single bomb that had instantly
destroyed the entire city. His boss thought that he had gone mad. There was no way a single bomb
could destroy a city. When the Americans bombed a city, they had to send dozens to hundreds
of bombers, which had to drop hundreds to thousands of bombs. A single airplane couldn't do that.
And just as they were having this argument about how a single bomb couldn't destroy a city,
Stomo Yamaguchi saw another massive flash of bright light.
He threw himself to the ground before the shockwaves hit the building blasting out all the windows.
The blast blew Yamaguchi's bandages right off his body.
In an odd twist of fate, the position of the building he was in relative to the hills of the city protected much of the structure.
And the position of a stairwell in the building protected the office that he was in.
He didn't know it at the time, but he was once again, almost exactly 1.9 miles,
or three kilometers from ground zero.
His personal injuries this time were not as severe as what he experienced in Hiroshima,
simply because of the location of where he was when the detonation took place.
His first concern was now his family.
He rushed from the Mitsubishi building to check on his wife and child.
When he came upon his home, he found that much of it had collapsed, and he assumed the worst.
However, he found both his wife and child had survived and were taking shelter in a small tunnel.
His wife had been looking for an ointment for Yamaguchi when the blast took place.
Had she not been in that exact spot, she and her child probably would have been killed.
Stomo Yamaguchi, his wife and young child, spent the next week in an air raid shelter.
While his family was fine, he began suffering severe symptoms of radiation sickness.
His hair started falling out.
He suffered from fevers, the wounds on his arms turned gangrenous, and he was vomiting incessantly.
And on August 15th, the people were in on August 15th, the people were in and he was in incessantly.
of Japan, for the first time ever, heard the voice of their emperor on the radio as he announced
the surrender of Japan. Yamaguchi later said, quote, I was neither sorry nor glad. I was seriously ill
with a fever, eating almost nothing, hardly even drinking. I thought that I was about to cross to the other
side. Despite the severity of his wounds and his exposure to not one but two atomic bombs, Stomo
Yamaguchi managed to survive. After the war, he took a job as an interpreter during the American
occupation of Japan. He then later became a teacher and finally went back to Mitsubishi to the job
he originally started with, a nautical engineer working on oil tankers. He and his wife went on
to have two more daughters, and he never spoke of the dual events that he suffered in 1945.
That was until he eventually did. In 1981, he heard Pope John Paul II speak in Hiroshima. Having
experienced both atomic bombs, he felt that he should say something. However, he felt guilty because
by this time he had fully recovered, whereas there were still people who were very sick from radiation
exposure. His attitude changed in 2005 when his son died of cancer. Now in his late 80s, he decided
to speak up and tell his story. He published a book of his memoirs and appeared in a documentary
called Twice Bombed, Twice Survived. At the age of 90, he received his first passport and traveled to New York
to address the United Nations about the abolishment of nuclear weapons. In 1950s, he was a lot of
the Japanese government recognized survivors of the atomic blast as Hibakuha. The Hibakusha were entitled
to free medical care for life. In 2009, the Japanese government recognized Stomo Yomoguchi as the only
double Hibakusha. In reality, there may have been hundreds of people who survived to Rosima and
managed to get back to Nagasaki. Many of them worked for the Mitsubishi Corporation, but most of those
people perished in the second attack just three days later. The estimated number of people who
may have survived both attacks ranges from 75 to 165. Stomu Yamaguchi passed away on January 4th,
2010 at the age of 93 from stomach cancer. While he finally decided to tell his story late in life,
he did manage to tell it. Stomu Yamaguchi had the misfortune of experiencing one of the worst
events in world history twice. It was a distinction that very few people in human history can claim,
and hopefully one which no one will ever be able to be able to be able to be.
able to make again.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett.
Today's review comes from listener Alan Cook Pass Babtridge over on Apple Podcasts in Great Britain.
They write,
Knowing Everything Everywhere, aha!
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I listen daily in my Lexus on the way home from my hugely successful late-night
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With this carefully researched 10-minute topical breakdowns, I am now
armed with many subjects of interest for social situations. With Gary's help, I can now detect the
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