Children’s Peace Monument and Sadako Saskaki’s Paper Cranes
Sumedha BharpilaniaSumedha Bharpilania/Guest Contributor/SIGHTSEEING, HIROSHIMA/ Updated : Sep 13, 2016, 10:22 IST
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Also known as the ‘Tower of a Thousand Cranes’, the Children’s Peace Monument stands as a testimony to the tragic effects the atomic bombing of 1945 had on the children of Hiroshima. A toddler by the name of Sadako Sasaki was expo … Read more
Also known as the ‘Tower of a Thousand Cranes’, the Children’s Peace Monument stands as a testimony to the tragic effects the atomic bombing of 1945 had on the children of Hiroshima. A toddler by the name of Sadako Sasaki was exposed to the bombing only to contract leukaemia a decade later and die a painful death. Read less

Also known as the ‘Tower of a Thousand Cranes’, the Children’s Peace Monument stands as a testimony to the tragic effects the atomic bombing of 1945 had on the children of Hiroshima. A toddler by the name of Sadako Sasaki was exposed to the bombing only to contract leukaemia a decade later and die a painful death. During her tragically brief life, she believed in the Japanese legend of being granted a wish upon successfully folding a thousand paper cranes. As fate would have it, Sadako fell short and died while her friends completed her goal for her. The shock associated with her demise led students to build a monument that mourned all of the children who lost their lives to the atomic bomb explosion. Designed by Kazuo Kikuchi, a professor of Tokyo University of the Arts, this 9 m high bronze statue represents children holding cranes that in turn symbolise the need for bringing peace into our world.
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