The Nuclear August of 1945

By NIKOLAY PALCHIKOFF

RENO, Nev. -- I was one of the first American soldiers to visit
Hiroshima after its destruction by the atomic bomb 56 years ago
today. Until recently, it was not something I talked about. Still
now, at 77, it's hard not to cry when I picture walking into that
city more than half a century ago. But it's important to remember.
There are few of us around who do.

 I went to Hiroshima some three weeks after the fatal day. I had
been born and raised there and was going home to search for my
family. My father was a member of the Russian nobility and had been
an officer in the White Army. He fled Russia with my mother during
the Russian Revolution and settled in Japan. I grew up eating
piroshki and sushi, speaking Russian and Japanese. Before the war,
when I was 16, I left Japan to go to school in the United States.
The rest of my family stayed behind.

 After Pearl Harbor, like many 18- year old boys, I yearned to
become a soldier. With my Slavic ethnicity and Japanese language
fluency, I became a member of United States Army intelligence,
working in translation and interrogation.

 I first heard about the bombing of Hiroshima the day it happened.
I was 21 at the time, translating Japanese radio in the
Philippines. No one believed my reports. My Army superiors
ridiculed my translation skills. The next day, President Harry
Truman announced to the world that, indeed, the United States had
dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima.

 Soon afterward I was sent to Japan to help make sure the Japanese
were living up to the conditions of the surrender agreement, and I
traveled to Hiroshima. It was the worst moment of my life. Although
I had seen wartime atrocities, I wasn't prepared for what I saw
now: nothing. No birds. No people. No buildings. No trees. No life.
Outlines of human bodies burned like negatives in cement.

 The house I had grown up in was gone. The city had vaporized.


Fortunately, just a few days before Hiroshima was attacked, my
family had moved to a house far enough away from the bomb's
epicenter so that they survived. When I found them, there was a
moment of joy, until they described the bomb's aftermath: People
walking and dropping dead in their tracks. People running for the
river, seeking escape from the scorching heat. Skin falling off
bodies. Everyone desperate for water.

 My family and I left for Tokyo and then went to America. I vowed
never to return. What does one do after walking into a nuclear dust
bowl? Like many, I believed that peace could come only from having
a strong defense. I decided to remain in the Army while the United
States prepared for its newest enemies, the Russians. During the
Cuban missile crisis I built an elaborate bomb shelter under my
house, complete with water, septic tank and canned food. I was
ready for an attack.

 One day the reserves called me away from work to participate in an
"emergency" drill. But when I discovered they were simulating a
nuclear war in the drill, and that my job was to keep the
"contaminated" people away from the "noncontaminated" people,
something suddenly didn't seem right. I knew that in a real nuclear
war there would be few people standing around, contamination would
affect everyone and most people would be dead. I began to rethink
the Army's mission and soon resigned.

 For a long time, despite what I had seen in Hiroshima, I thought
dropping the bomb had been the right thing to do. I believed what
Truman had said, that the bomb had saved lives. But as we entered
the arms race with the Soviet Union, my mind began to change. I had
seen the destruction that was felt for generations to come. I
feared for the future of my grandchildren. Often, I envisioned my
classmates, evaporated by the bomb. Why couldn't the United States
have dropped the bomb on an island with no inhabitants to show
Japan what a powerful weapon it had?

 I have returned to Hiroshima twice since 1945, once in 1986 and
once in 1995 on the 50th anniversary of the bombing. On that second
trip, I walked for one month, in the scorching heat of Japan's
summer, from Kobe to Hiroshima, talking to Japanese people about my
experiences. I spoke at a conference in Hiroshima commemorating the
anniversary, begging forgiveness for any part I might have played
in what I now consider a heinous crime. It was a speech I couldn't
finish. But I had come to realize that remembering and talking
about such atrocities is the only way we can prevent them from
happening again.Nikolay Palchikoff is a retired businessman.


Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company