August 15— The dawn of a new day
By Dr. Daisaku Ikeda
Read by Dr. Akash Ouchi
August 15, 1945—
the day the Japanese nation,
led by arrogant, foolish leaders,
fell in defeat.
A day that marked the start
of a new era.
A day when the people’s hearts
began to pulse again with joy
toward a new future.
A day of penitence
recalling the senseless
battlefield deaths
of so many millions
of loved ones.
A day of eternal parting
from sweethearts and lovers.
A day of tears
for mothers who would
never again see their dear children.
A day of hopeless heartbreak,
learning that young sons,
—the future hope of their families
and society as a whole—
were never to return.
A day of anguished grief
as fathers, too, shed bitter tears…
The fifteenth of August—
Ah, August 15!
Even now these sights
are burned indelibly
in my heart.
In the midst of an air raid
in the middle of the night
an elderly couple shaking with fear
as they fled weaving their way
through the streets.
Also unforgettable
was this pitiful sight—
a group of middle-aged men,
apparently of some standing,
scampering in desperate rout
like trapped and panicked prisoners…
Our family saw
my four elder brothers,
all in the prime of life,
called away to war.
All four were made tools
of Japan’s invasion of China.
My eldest brother
was sent to fight in Burma,
where he died in battle.
With heavy steps
my aged parents
waited and waited,
wondering when, oh, when
would he and
their other three sons
return.
In those days,
my father and my mother
rarely smiled.
Suffering from tuberculosis,
I did not know
what to say—nor to whom—
of my future hopes and dreams.
It was an era of people
drifting through the streets
lost in solitary sadness
None of us had wanted
this war.
We had never
accepted or supported it.
Yet over time
almost without noticing,
we were all influenced,
maneuvered and brainwashed
to extol the glories of war.
The human heart holds
terrible possibilities.
More terrible still
are those who use their power
to mold and manipulate
people’s minds.
On August 15,
Japan was defeated,
utterly and totally defeated.
Ah, August 15, 1945!
That day the summer sky
was bright and brilliant.
At noon there was
a radio broadcast announcing
Japan’s defeat.
Invincible Japan,
so certain of victory,
had been thoroughly beaten.
Many wept,
but far more, no doubt,
felt relief
deep in their hearts.
The summer sky,
where once we had watched
enemy planes,
was now incredibly quiet,
and red dragonflies
flitted gaily through the air.
Japan, which had declared itself
the invincible land of the gods,
lay in utter ruin.
My family had been forced
to evacuate our home,
to stay with relatives
in Nishi Magome.
However, this refuge,
this house set amid peaceful fields,
took a direct hit
from an incendiary bomb.
With all our worldly
possessions inside,
it was instantly engulfed in flame.
With our relatives’ consent,
my father constructed a tiny hut
on the same lot,
with a small sheet
of scorched tin for a roof.
We had no mosquito netting,
so now, instead of bombs,
we faced the assault
of squadrons of mosquitoes.
On that day of August 15,
my father, face flushed with emotion,
murmured to himself,
“My sons will now return.
My eldest, Kiichi,
my second, Masuo,
my third, Kaizo,
and my fourth, Kiyonobu,
are coming home.
One from Burma
three from China—
they’re coming home.”
He uttered these words,
breath catching painfully
in his chest,
as one awakening
from a dream.
My diminutive mother
prepared dinner,
excited as a young girl:
“How bright it is!
Now we can keep the lights on!
How lovely and bright!”
That summer,
my father was fifty-seven,
my mother forty-nine,
and I was seventeen.
August 15 was the day,
the moment we emerged from a
deep and hellish gloom,
regaining as a family
some happiness and cheer.
Although some of my siblings
wept at Japan’s defeat,
deep inside everyone was relieved:
How good, they thought,
how good that the war
is over at last.
August 15—
We must never forget
the painful misery of that day.
We must never forget
the desolation of that day.
And we must never forget
that humiliating awakening
to the folly of slavish obedience.
August 15—
Let us make this day
a day praised by all
the people of Asia.
Let us make this day
a day respected by all
the world’s citizens.
This day of
August 15, 2001—
this is a day of fresh departure
for the youth of the new century.
It is a day
to be eternally commemorated
as a day of peace,
as the start of a new era of life.