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You are Invited to
Livermore Lab
on Hiroshima Day
on Hiroshima Day
Bay Area groups will jointly mark the
74th anniversary of the U.S. atomic bombings of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki at the Livermore Lab, where the Trump
Administration is presently spending billions to create new
nuclear warheads.
The Tuesday, August 6, 2019
commemoration is titled, “Designing Armageddon
at Livermore Lab: Rally, March and Nonviolent Direct
Action for Nuclear Disarmament.” Participants will
gather at the northwest corner of the Livermore Lab (Vasco
Road and Patterson Pass Road). The rally will begin at 8 AM and will feature music, speakers,
poetry, art and more. There is free parking at the event
site.
Daniel Ellsberg will
deliver the keynote address. Ellsberg is the military
analyst and whistleblower who shone a bright light on U.S.
policy and helped end the Vietnam War when he released the
Pentagon Papers. Ellsberg published an award-winning memoir
in 2017, “The Doomsday Machine: Confessions of
a Nuclear War Planner.” He remains a brilliant
analyst, commentator and sought-after speaker.
Nobuaki Hanaoka, an atomic bomb
survivor, will be the rally’s special guest speaker.
Hanaoka was an infant when the bomb fell on Nagasaki on
August 9, 1945. His mother and sister died from illnesses
linked to radiation poisoning and his brother died at age
39 from premature aging associated with fallout from the
bomb. Hanaoka is a retired minister in the United
Methodist Church, who came to the U.S. following seminary
training in Japan. He has settled in the Bay Area where he
speaks, writes and teaches on topics of peace and human
rights.
Rafael Jesús González, the first
poet-laureate of Berkeley and an organizer of the 1983
International Day of Nuclear Disarment will speak.
and Marylia Kelley of Tri-Valley CAREs will
also be featured.
Immediately following the rally program, at approximately 9:15 AM, will be a "call to action," in which participants will be invited to march a short distance to the Livermore Lab West Gate. At the gate, Japanese activists will lead a traditional bon dance. Everyone is invited to participate.
Following the dance will be a
commemorative die-in and symbolic chalking of the bodies to
mimic the “shadows” left by men, women and children
vaporized by the A-bomb blast.
Those who choose will then
peaceably risk arrest. Others will conduct a legal witness
and support.
A flyer is available
with nonviolence guidelines, vanpool info,
and how to RSVP for the August 4th and
5th kid-friendly Peace Camp.
Promoting environmental cleanup and stopping nuclear weapons where they start — Livermore Lab
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