News

Take a flight of discovery high above the solemn and serene Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park in Japan with this breathtaking ...
TOKYO—A Nobel Prize-winning anti-nuclear group launched an online memorial Tuesday for the 38,000 children who died in the US atomic bombings of Hiroshima ...
The statue stood in Peace Park since 1990, often decorated by colorful origami cranes. But last July, thieves cut the statue down and stole it. Her feet were all that was left.
Hiroshima (Jiji Press) -- A ceremony was held Monday to mark the 67th anniversary of the establishment of the Children's Peace Monument at the Peace Memorial Park in the atomic-bombed western ...
The statue of Sadako Sasaki stood in Seattle's Peace Park for decades, until a Friday morning in July when it was discovered someone stole the statue, cutting it at her ankles.
People gathered at Peace Park in Seattle for a healing event after the theft of a bronze statue of Sadako Sasaki, who survived the Hiroshima atomic bomb as a toddler.
All other buildings in the area were immediately either flattened or burned to ash. The Peace Memorial Park was built over their remains and extends over 120,000 square metres. The Children’s Peace ...
Petaluma Peace Tree ceremony: ‘To create a more peaceful world’ A plaque honoring the tree and its history will be dedicated just two days shy of the 79th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima.
According to the SPD Blotter, officers received a report on July 12 that the statue of “Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes” was stolen from Peace Park, located at 851 N.E. 40th St.
SEATTLE — A piece of history that once stood in Seattle's Peace Park is now gone forever after thieves cut down the bronze statue of a 12-year-old girl known as Sadako Sasaki. The theft occurred ...
A 2016 photo taken at the Seattle Peace Park shows the statue of Sadako Sasaki, a victim of the 1945 atomic bombing of Hiroshima, adorned with colorful paper cranes left by visitors.
Since 1990, the statue of Sadako Sasaki, a two-year-old girl who survived the Hiroshima bombing in 1945, stood in Peace Park right across the street from the University Friends Meeting.