Nothing bombastic or ostentatious as it might seem by its name, this museum is named for the aircraft carrier in which it is located since 1974. Continue reading “INTREPID SEA, AIR AND SPACE MUSEUM IN NEW YORK CITY”
Nothing bombastic or ostentatious as it might seem by its name, this museum is named for the aircraft carrier in which it is located since 1974. Continue reading “INTREPID SEA, AIR AND SPACE MUSEUM IN NEW YORK CITY”
Almost 100% of tourists in Paris go to the Louvre Museum, the Orsay Museum, or both, and few are Continue reading “RODIN MUSEUM”
No wonder why Auckland is every year on top of the ranking of cities with best quality of life. Continue reading “SIGHTS IN AUCKLAND, ITINERARY FOR ONE DAY”
HIROSHIMA PEACE MEMORIAL MUSEUM
If you go to Hiroshima is to visit the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, one of the museums in the world I sadly consider essential. Continue reading “BEST THINGS TO DO IN HIROSHIMA: PEACE MEMORIAL MUSEUM, PEACE MEMORIAL PARK AND CASTLE”
A little bit of history: in August 6, 1945, a nuclear bomb is dropped by the United States over Hiroshima. The official version: Hiroshima was “an important weapons depot and a shipping port in the center of an industrial urban area”. As it is explained in the museum, there is food for thought here: if it was such an important weapons depot and an interesting port, why it had not been bombed even once since the beginning of the war in December 1941? Why only 4 other cities throughout Japan had not been bombed, one of which was Nagasaki? Sometimes, US aircraft dropped pamphlets warning civilians that their city would be bombed so they had time to evacuate the city or go to the a shelter, but this time they did not warned … Obviously they had decided to drop the bomb even before the war had started and they needed to know how powerful it was. There were 255,000 people in the city; 80,000 died burned alive just like that, in minutes time. Another 20,000 in the next 24 hours. In 4 months 140,000 had died, and 200,000 in 5 years; 190,000 were civilians. In addition to the physical sequelae from burns, thousands of survivors developed radiation related diseases, most of them cancer over the next 20 years, and even today some of them have health problems related to exposure to radiation in their youth.
It is said that “those who do not know history are condemned to repeat it” and that “we learn from our mistakes”. Hiroshima is a place where, to your regret, you will learn a lot.