|
Sadako Sasaki was 4 years old when the
atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima.
She survived the bombing but contracted
leukaemia when she was 12. When she
was in hospital a friend told her that
if you fold 1000 paper cranes it will
bring good fortune and she may get well.
So she folded cranes and completed 674
before she died. She is remembered by
children all over Japan and her memorial
stands in Hiroshima today.
The paper crane has become an international
symbol of peace in recent years as a
result of it's connection to the story
of a young Japanese girl named Sadako
Sasaki born in 1943. Sadako was two
years old when the atom bomb was dropped
on Hiroshima, Japan on August 6, 1945.
As she grew up, Sadako was a strong,
courageous and athletic girl. In 1955,
at age 11, while practicing for a big
race, she became dizzy and fell to the
ground. Sadako was diagnosed with Leukemia,
"the atom bomb" disease.
Sadako's best friend told her of an
old Japanese legend which said that
anyone who folds a thousand paper cranes
would be granted a wish. Sadako hoped
that the gods would grant her a wish
to get well so that she could run again.
She started to work on the paper cranes
and completed over 1000 before dying
on October 25, 1955 at the age of twelve.
Inspired by her courage and strength,
Sadako's friends and classmates put
together a book of her letters and published
it. They began to dream of building
a monument to Sadako and all of the
children killed by the atom bomb. Young
people all over Japan helped collect
money for the project.
In 1958, a statue of Sadako holding
a golden crane was unveiled in Hiroshima
Peace Park. The children also made a
wish which is inscribed at the bottom
of the statue and reads:
"This is our cry, This is our prayer,
Peace in the world".
Today, people all over the world fold
paper cranes and send them to Sadako's
monument in Hiroshima.
Back
to top |