Posts Tagged ‘Katsuji Yoshida’

Katsuji Yoshida

Monday, August 8th, 2022

My face was fully burnt and scorched.

People stared at me, and children cried at the sight of my face.

Still, I feel pain every morning looking at the mirror.

-Katsuji Yoshida

Katsuji Yoshida was 13 years old when the atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki and was at a very close distance of 850m from the hypocenter.  When the air raid siren sounded the all-clear, he and his classmates headed back to school from the shelter.  Looking up he saw American planes dropping parachutes and suddenly, the blast.

The boys were thrust up in the air and scattered about 120 feet away.  Katsuji was thrown into a wet rice field. The soft mud absorbed the force of the turbulent blast and probably saved his life but all his skin peeled off his body. Luckily, the boys survived. They encouraged each other and washed the mud off themselves in a nearby irrigation field.  They found grass and put some on their bodies to cool down the scorched and missing skin.

A rescue team came the following day and he spent another two nights with the other children at a relief station set up in a school yard until his mother came to identify him.  “At that time, my face was swollen. I couldn’t see because my eyes were swollen shut.  My mother did not recognize me, so she kept calling my name in the ear of every boy lying there. Then I raised my hand.  I lost consciousness from then until December. They told me that I was between life and death for four months.”

After years of emotional and physical pain caused by the atomic bomb and also discrimination, Katsuji slowly conquered his agony and suffering.  Later in life he spoke about his experiences throughout the world.  He became one of the most vocal Hibakusha and well known peace activists.  On April 1st, 2010, Mr. Yoshida passed away.  It was an honor to meet him. 

This portrait is a part of my From Above project which a collection of portraits and reminiscences of atomic bomb survivors  From Above is permanently exhibited at the Nagasaki Peace Memorial Hall for Atomic Bomb Victims. It has also been exhibited in numerous international museums and exhibition spaces. From Above was released as a limited edition book released as a limited edition book available at https://www.photoeye.com/bookstore/citation.cfm?catalog=I1040&i=&i2

FROM ABOVE featured on the John Batchelor Show, WABC Radio

Sunday, October 30th, 2011

My interview with talk show host John Batchelor was broadcast on WABC Radio this weekend. It was the first US interview about FROM ABOVE, my book featuring portraits and testimonials of atomic bomb survivors and firebombing survivors from Dresden and Tokyo.

The interview can now be heard on the web at this link:
http://podfuse-dl.andomedia.com/800185/podfuse-origin.andomedia.com/citadel_origin/pods/WABC/WABC-Batchelor/jbs_102911b.mp3

The book can be purchased in the US, Japan and Europe from this links:
http://www.photoeye.com/bookstore/citation.cfm?catalog=I1040

There will only be one edition of the book printed and we hope to have all copies sold by the end of the year.

From Above at the Nagasaki Peace Museum, Article in Japan Times

Sunday, July 4th, 2010

..June 2010 Nagasaki..

Article written in The Japan Times about the opening of From Above photography exhibition at the Nagasaki Peace Museum.

Ironically the article and photo are twice the size and above a story on the Japanese Prime Minister’s trip to the G20 Summit and the death of Japan’s oldest koala.

Mr. Katsuji Yoshida

Saturday, April 3rd, 2010

..September 2008.. ..1 Block from the Epicenter, Nagasaki..

Mr. Katsuji Yoshida
76 years old
Monday 11AM

..Mr. Katsuji Yoshida was badly injured by the atomic bomb blast. 14 years younger than Mr. Obata, my first portrait, he was much more frail and nimble. His mind was sharp, some of the fine details not exact but concise.

He was the most delicate Hibakusha I met. Unable to be photographed outdoors because his skin was to sensitive to be in the sun. He wore a fisherman’s cap to protect his head. The right side of his face badly scarred from burns and an ear patch covering his missing ear. He walked well and didn’t need a cane. His mind was vibrant. You could still see the youth in his eyes and hear the energy in his voice.

August 9th, 1945 11:02AM

Yoshida-san was 13 years old.

Yoshida-san sees US planes dropping parachutes minutes before the atomic bomb was dropped. They were testing wind speed and direction for the drop. He clearly described hearing the engines as the planes glided over.

He was walking to school with 3 other boys about a ½ mile from the epicenter seconds before the atomic bomb was detonated. They were walking across a field and stopped at a well to get a drink of water.

He looked up and saw another set of parachutes drop. Suddenly the blast and violent light. He was sent flying through the air.

The boys were thrust up in the air, across the field, and a road. About 120 feet away from the well.

The impact of the atomic bomb threw him face first into a wet rice field. The soft mud absorbed the force of the turbulent blast and probably saved his life.
“…It didn’t hurt much…nobody was crying…..”
Yoshida-san describing the moment the atomic bomb exploded.

Coming to his senses….Seconds before he was a 13 year old boy walking to school. Seconds after the atomic bomb detonated….all his skin had peeled off his body. No skin left on his arms and legs. Only scorched skin left on his face.

He than washed off the mud in a nearby irrigation field. Found some surviving foliage and grass. Put grass on his face and body to cool down the scorched and missing skin. They decide to sit there and wait for help.

Minutes later women come out of a field badly burnt, crying, and screaming “…Help us…”. The scene ignited emotion in the numb 13 year old boys. They burst into a bombastic cry. This was the first time he and the other boys felt emotion.

The badly injured women drink from the Irakami River. The water was contaminated with radiation. They died quickly, bodies lied motionless on the river banks. Water slowly washing their burnt bodies.

Yoshida-san made a rule not to drink the water. He knew from school that not matter how much blood he lost when injured, never drink the water.

Looking around, all the buildings were destroyed or blazing. Nagasaki was an inferno. Corpses in every direction. Body parts randomly thrown. Intestines, pieces of brain, eye balls, split skulls, and unidentifiable faces littered the streets.

He didn’t feel anything. He didn’t know what he was looking at. Shock must have set in.

As the day grew old, the sun heated the grass covering his burnt body. His initial numbness transformed into throbbing pain. The moist grass dried against his exposed muscle. It was torture. He was not strong enough to walk. There was no shade. Nagasaki was a featureless landscape of char. Trees that survived the initial blast were quickly ablaze in the coming fires.

Yoshida-san happy to see the sun set after it beat on him while lying in the exposed field. His face started to swell. He could no longer see after his eyes began to swell shut.

At night, his skinless body shivered in the cold. The rescue team came the following day.

For 2 days he remained with other school children at a relief station set up in a school yard until his mother came to identify him. He doesn’t remember much, Only his mother’s voice, calling his name the next day. He raised his hand when he heard his name.
“…We were faint but we could answer our parents call…”
Yoshida-san

I’m interested to know what his mother’s voice sounded like. Was it a frantic scream? A mother finding her son alive after the Apocalypse. What was the look on her face? Her reaction….

The 2 boys died soon after.

He has no memory of the next 2 months he spent at home bed ridden. A hospital facility was set up 2 months later at a surviving elementary school. Than he was taken to a naval hospital outside of Nagasaki.

In December 1945, 4 months later, the skin on the left side of his face started to grow back. The burns on the right side of his body never recovered.


Mr. Katsuji Yoshida

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

..April 2010.. ..Nagasaki..

“…It came so suddenly…we really didn’t feel pain…”
Mr. Katsuji Yoshida, about August 9th, 1945

Earlier today atomic bomb Survivor Mr. Katsuji Yoshida passed away from lung cancer.

In September 2008, I had the honor of meeting and photographing Yoshida-san for my From Above exhibition. Yoshida-san was very close to epicenter of the atomic bombing when it detonated over Nagasaki, probably 500m-1000m. He was one of the only Survivors that close to the epicenter.

The impact of the blast threw him face first into a wet rice field. Landing in the softness of the mud probably saved his life. He was badly injured and spent many months in the hospital. For 66 years, he would be in and out of the hospital dealing with injuries and illness caused by radiation exposure.

When I met him, he was very fragile but his spirit was still young and vibrant. He couldn’t be photographed outdoors because the sun was to harsh for his skin. As he walked through the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum people would stop and Bow. He would speak to anyone who greeted him.

Yoshida-san dedicated his life to speaking about the horrors of the atomic bomb and the discrimination he overcame throughout his life being an Hibakusha. He traveled around the world speaking to anyone.

It was an honor meeting and photographing him. An experience I will never forget. The world has lost an important Human Being.

I will post the journal entries of Yoshida-san over the next couple of days.