Keiko Ogura, a survivor of the Hiroshima atomic bombing saw everything with her own eyes. She saw survivors gather up outside her house. They were on fire and their faces were swollen, they begged for water. People's skin was peeling. It looked like they were holding a rag, but in reality, it was their own skin. Pictures of victims were shown to the public in 1980. When Keiko went to America they knew little about the horrors she experienced. Not a single U.S president has ever visited Hiroshima or Nagasaki. Today Kaiko is a peace activist.
Keiko Ogura, a survivor of the Hiroshima atomic bombing saw everything with her own eyes. She saw survivors gather up outside her house. They were on fire and their faces were swollen, they begged for water. People's skin was peeling. It looked like they were holding a rag, but in reality, it was their own skin. Pictures of victims were shown to the public in 1980. When Keiko went to America they knew little about the horrors she experienced. Not a single U.S president has ever visited Hiroshima or Nagasaki. Today Kaiko is a peace activist.