- Source:
- mugi80190880
- Tags:
- History
Related Article
-
This Tokyo Arcade’s Creepy Dystopian Atmosphere is Straight Out of Blade Runner
-
Japan Celebrates 100th Anniversary Of Anime By Launching A Free Archive Of Works Throughout The Century
-
Bushy-Browed Boys Perform Quirky Dance In Kagoshima City’s New Promo Video
-
Japanese Pictorial Scroll From The Meiji Period Depicts Hell With Endearing Charm
-
Kyoto’s Sanjusangendo Temple of 1001 Buddhist Statues: An Antidote to Instagram Travel Culture
-
Now You Can Experience Traditional Japanese Art in Mixed Reality at Historic Kyoto Temple[PR]
This week, survivors of the atomic bombing of Japan during World War 2 marked the 74th anniversary of the attack with a minute’s silence in Hiroshima.
This air of remembrance is what prompted a Twitter user (@mugi80190880) to post her own family’s wartime story along with an item that the family has kept until this day. If her grandfather had never owned this item, she would never have been born.
My grandfather’s tobacco case…
This is my grandfather’s iron tobacco case.
Towards the end of the war, my grandfather was a young man on the frontline of the Japanese army.
During a gun fight, his chest took a strong impact… he had been hit by the enemy…in that moment he thought ‘Ah, I’m dead...’
He fell to the ground and suddenly realised… he was alive.
The iron tobacco case in his left side's breast pocket had caught the bullet. It blasted through one side and lost so much momentum that it couldn’t penetrate the other side of the case.
Source: mugi80190880
This innocuous item had saved Mugi's grandfather, and as she went on to point out in her tweets, this led to him returning home to get married to her grandmother. Then the following year, on 6th August, the same day the atomic bomb dropped, her father was born.
Now she has a son of her own and if her grandfather had died that day, her father, herself and her son, would have never existed.
Just 1 millimetre of iron changed the whole course of this family’s future. It's a humbling and poignant reminder of the fragility of human life and the reality of war. Mugi ended the Twitter thread with hopes for peace in the future.