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Full circle
-The epic return to Trinity-
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- The flame from Hiroshima has now been
returned to its place of origin and extinguished.
- A flame was lit in 1945 from the
embers of the fires in Hiroshima that the atomic bomb started. The
flame has been kept in a temple close to Nagasaki. Every year monks
have walked from Hiroshima to Nagasaki, and there walked in circles to
symbolize that this should be the last bomb.
- Now the monks have brought the flame
across to California and walked through the desert to the place of the
first atomic bomb explosion, called Trinity, near Alamogordo in New
Mexico.
There they
were joined by people working for a nuclear weapon free world.
There was a moving ceremony in complete silence.
The torch with the flame was passed from monk to monk and to us and
then used to ignite a large paper with a prayer written in Japanese.
The paper had been folded around paper-cranes from
Hiroshima and ropes from the sandals the monks had carried on their
walk. When the fire had died away the ashes and sand was collected and
partitioned between four lacquer boxes, who fitted inside a larger box.
The very beautiful boxes were crafted by the foremost master in Japan.
The four boxes are going to be given to the White Sands museum close to
the site, to Hiroshima and to Nagasaki and the content in the fourth
box is going to be divided into boxes that will be given to the leaders
of the eight states who have nuclear weapons.
Sixty years is an important time period for Buddhists. The energy from
the primeval forces of the universe was unleashed by man for the first
time at this site and is now returned. The circle is completed. Now is
the time to begin a sixty year period not dominated by the threat of
extinction by nuclear weapons but by finding ways to remove the
threat. Never again Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The monk's
walk and ceremonies have been filmed by a team financed and inspired by
Steve Seagal who is going to make it into documentary. The ceremony at
Trinity was sent out to all major TV media.
The Global Nuclear
Disarmament Fund, founded by IPPNW, “Active Music” and others, were
among the organisers. Matt Taylor and his volunteers, in particular
Cindy McClure had done great work to prepare this solemn and
profound ceremony.From IPPNW participated Ira Helfand and Gunnar
Westberg. Delegates were also the Downwinders Claudia Peterson and
Michelle Thomas and the legendary singer and activist Peter Yarrow.
Peace groups from ll over the USA were represented.
Film and pictures were taken by the professionals and will later be
available to us. We will then make a more extensive and illustrated
report for the IPPNW homepage.
Gunnar Westberg
IPPNW Co-President
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