08/08/2025
🎧 From public radio program, The World: “Aug. 6 marked the 80th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan. The blast destroyed two-thirds of the Japanese port city, instantly killing about 140,000 people. The focus at memorials in Hiroshima is on the lives lost, but there are also visual scars in the city, testaments to survival: 159 trees that were nearly vaporized in the blast but have grown back over the past 80 years.
For National Geographic Explorer Paul Salopek, the survivor trees in Hiroshima are living symbols of the city’s history.”
An excerpt of the conversation between The World’s host Marco Werman and Paul Salopek is included here:
🎙️ Marco Werman: Set the scene for us in Hiroshima. What does this area of the city look like?
🔈 Paul Salopek: The whole downtown, they call the Hypocenter, where the bomb fell, is a series of interlocking peace parks, memorial parks. So, they’re green spaces. And there’s one ruined building that has been left standing, his famous domed building, as a monument to the blast that occurred back in 1945.
🎙️ Marco Werman: And the trees, are they kind of scattered throughout these peace parks, or just one of them?
🔈 Paul Salopek: Yeah, no, they’re scattered throughout, including in some streets beyond. I mean, you just see this big old tree standing there, and often they’re leaning; sometimes they have scarred surfaces, their trunks are scarred from the heat of the blast. But, they all have a little monument marker because they’re national monuments in Japan, each one of these 159 trees.
🔗 Listen to or read along with the full conversation at the link below.
This story is part of an ongoing series of stories about the Walk produced by The World in collaboration with the Out of Eden Walk nonprofit organization and the National Geographic Society.
When the Japanese city of Hiroshima became the site of the first-ever use of a nuclear weapon in war, two-thirds of the city was destroyed. Today, it's a lively city of over a million people. And scattered throughout are 159 trees that were nearly destroyed in the blast, but have since grown back to...