The flying machine, a harbinger of death, flew across oceans, a beast in the morning calm.
The Enola Gay*, and Little Boy** silently sliced the skies, roaring ever closer to ground zero.
Hiroshima bustled, the sound of birds, of children, of mothers preparing breakfast, of fathers shaving their one day old stubbles.
Dogs barked, cats tucked themselves in corners, children skipped, vegetable stands ploughed the streets.
The Enola Gay flew nearer.
Hiroshima's people oblivious of the hell that awaited them, the fires of apocalypse that would soon consume them, laughed and quarrelled and worked and haggled the price of the fresh morning fruit.
It was at 8:15 AM, the metallic beast prowling above released Little Boy.
Little Boy fell, down towards the city, to fracture its people, in the hubbub of early morning.
The Atomic Bomb exploded, its light blotting out the morning sun, its deafening roar bursting eardrums.
The payload was delivered.
The Generals at Command Centre were triumphant.
The Enola Gay flew away, leaving a mushroom cloud rising higher and higher as it rained down unspeakable horrors, indescribable destruction.
It has been said that in Hiroshima that day, and in the weeks and months that followed, the living envied the dead, their skin peeling off as they roamed their city, their home, consumed by the sickening howls of pain from every quarter.
Little Boy exploded as it fell, releasing a heat that burnt people, searing their shadows into walls, preserved till today, a ghastly reminder of that savagery that befell all.
Radiation from the Bomb creeped into flesh, scorching innumerable innocents, as nuclear ash fell all around.
Man had created a weapon of such savagery, such indifferent brutality, a bringer of horrors, grotesque and merciless.
Man had used the weapon, not once, but twice, for three days later Fat Man*** was unleashed on Nagasaki.
I could write on, attempting to describe the indescribable horrors that rained down on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
I could write on, about the deformed babies being born, decades after those two days in early August of 1945.
I could write on, about the inhumanity man visited upon fellow human beings.
I could write on, about the stockpiles of nuclear weapons - tens of thousands of bombs - far, far more powerful than those that reduced Hiroshima and Nagasaki to radioactive ash.
I could write on, about the nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons housed in the silos of those who preach peace, of those who crow on about democracy, of those who let their people starve while testing the means to carry these weapons of hell across oceans.
I could write on, about the hypocrisy, the money spent on machines of destruction, as most humans of this world go hungry each night and day.
I could write on, and on, and on.
But what more can anyone say, as the wailing, the shrieking screams of the victims echo across time,
till today.
_________
* Enola Gay - the plane that carried the Atomic Bomb.
** Little Boy - the code name for the Atomic Bomb dropped on Hiroshima.
*** Fat Man - the code name for the Atomic Bomb dropped on Nagasaki on August 9th, 1945.
Me and you understand the madness of the world. When a world leader talks about using the nuclear weapon. I believe they are nuts. One nuclear weapon, 40 or more time stronger. Afzal, I pray for common sense. My grandfather told me often. “Grandson, common sense is hard to find in our world today.”
Yes my friend, it is totally insane for someone with his finger on literally thousands of Nuclear weapons to be throwing around such terrifying rhetoric. The old Cold-War “mutually assured destruction” or MAD fears are all-too real and that is terrifying, brother. May sane heads prevail or it’ll be curtains for all of us and gnu’s planet
So very true indeed – we call ourselves “civilised” and the incalculable pain of the oppression and the colonialism and naked imperialism that “civilising the uncivilised” is still with us – in our veins.
Yes, brother. Tears are the honest response and words should fail us!
Thank you, my brother, and may the ever-present threat of nuclear armageddon that people from our generation lived through be never visited on this generation and those to come – if this obscene war and it’s odious aggressor “allows” the possibility of future generations – and not annihilate us all. Yes, my brother David, tears. Tears for all and for earth our home.
My heart is racing with anxiety so I am going to get on the exercise bike to match its pace…then get on with the day. But I will be thinking of you and your remarkable poems and how to live in a way that increases our chances of survival.
Keep well and be good dear Afzal.
DD
Me and you understand the madness of the world. When a world leader talks about using the nuclear weapon. I believe they are nuts. One nuclear weapon, 40 or more time stronger. Afzal, I pray for common sense. My grandfather told me often. “Grandson, common sense is hard to find in our world today.”
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Yes my friend, it is totally insane for someone with his finger on literally thousands of Nuclear weapons to be throwing around such terrifying rhetoric. The old Cold-War “mutually assured destruction” or MAD fears are all-too real and that is terrifying, brother. May sane heads prevail or it’ll be curtains for all of us and gnu’s planet
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I hope my friend.
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Reblogged this on anastasiakalantzi59.
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Thank YOU as always, dear sister 🌿
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Powerful. And we think of ourselves as “civilized” human beings. May such a day never befall another city.
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So very true indeed – we call ourselves “civilised” and the incalculable pain of the oppression and the colonialism and naked imperialism that “civilising the uncivilised” is still with us – in our veins.
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Words fail me; they should.
Tears are the honest response.
Yet I thank you brother.
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Yes, brother. Tears are the honest response and words should fail us!
Thank you, my brother, and may the ever-present threat of nuclear armageddon that people from our generation lived through be never visited on this generation and those to come – if this obscene war and it’s odious aggressor “allows” the possibility of future generations – and not annihilate us all. Yes, my brother David, tears. Tears for all and for earth our home.
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My heart is racing with anxiety so I am going to get on the exercise bike to match its pace…then get on with the day. But I will be thinking of you and your remarkable poems and how to live in a way that increases our chances of survival.
Keep well and be good dear Afzal.
DD
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Be well, my dear brother David, and all my love and very warmest of wishes to you and everyone dear to you. Cheers from Jo’burg, mate ✌🏾️
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