A grandson of a woman who died last month after telling her experiences of being bombed at home and abroad for many years in Hiroshima, talks about the testimony and suffering she inherited from her grandmother at an American university, and young Americans also act toward a world free of nuclear weapons. I appealed to you.

Mr. Yukio Tominaga, who continues to convey the experiences of A-bomb survivors in Hiroshima, testified that he attended an online course held on the 27th at DuPaul University in Chicago in the Midwestern United States from Japan.



Mr. Tominaga is the grandson of Ms. Emiko Okada, a survivor who died last month. He talked about his thoughts.



Mr. Tominaga said, "My grandmother started to testify because she thought that children should not experience this kind of thing. I think that knowing it will lead to peace. Knowing the correct information and sprouting from it Please inflate your thoughts, "he said, calling on young Americans to act toward a world free of nuclear weapons.



The participating university students said, "What can we do in our area?" And "I learned that the A-bomb survivors are facing trauma."



The lecture on this day was planned by Associate Professor Yuki Miyamoto, who is a second-generation hibakusha from Hiroshima and teaches ethics at this university. I was given the challenge of how to face and share the experience. "