As the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II approaches, American University Museum in Washington is showcasing artifacts and art recalling the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
At a time of intensifying focus on Japan's reluctance face up to its militaristic past, the exhibition provides a different perspective on the end of the conflict one in which Japanese were the victims.
On the 50th anniversary of the bombings in 1995, a fierce controversy surrounded an exhibit at the Smithsonian Institution of the Enola Gay the B-29 plane that dropped the bomb on Hiroshima, Aug 6, 1945. The exhibit was dramatically scaled back because of veterans' protests that it portrayed the Japanese as victims rather than as aggressors.
Doing so at a private institution, and not a government-funded one, made it less contentious.
He's reprising that effort, 20 years on, with a display that opens today and runs until Aug 16. It includes six pictures on folding screens by the late Iri and Toshi Maruki, a husband-and-wife couple whose powerful depictions of nuclear horrors, known as the Hiroshima Panels, are being shown in the US capital for the first time.
In an adjacent room are 25 artifacts collected from the debris, among them a rosary, a glass fragment removed from the flesh of a casualty, container of sake rice wine, a student's cap and a student's shoe.
Kuznick said the primary aim of the exhibition is to portray the human suffering caused by the atomic bombings that ushered in an era in which absolute destruction of the planet became possible and "nobody's future is guaranteed anymore.
