Visitors to Hiroshima memorial reflect on Obama's visit
By KAORI HITOMI and FOSTER KLUG, Associated Press
May 26, 2016 10:46 PM CDT
School children offer prayers at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima, western Japan, Friday, May 27, 2016. Convinced that the time for this moment is right at last, U.S. President Barack Obama on Friday will become the first American president to confront the historic and haunted ground of...   (Associated Press)

HIROSHIMA, Japan (AP) — Visitors to the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park on Friday had this to say ahead of U.S. President Barack Obama's visit later in the day. Obama is the first sitting U.S. president to come to Hiroshima, a city devastated by a U.S.-dropped atomic bomb at the end of World War II.

___

KINUYO IKEGAMI, 84, who lit incense and chanted a prayer at stone memorial in the park

"I could hear schoolchildren screaming, "Help me! Help me!' It was too pitiful, too horrible. Even now it fills me with emotion."

___

TSUGUO YOSHIKAWA, 70, retired Hiroshima resident taking a walk in the park

"I don't think most Japanese and Hiroshima citizens have much sense of grudge any longer. I know some people from a survivors' group who said something like we should work together with the U.S. You know, we cannot move forward if we are sticking too firmly to a sense of grudge."

___

HAN JEONG-SOON, 58, daughter of Korean atomic-bomb survivor

"The suffering such as illness gets carried on over the generation. That is what I want President Obama to know. I want him to understand our sufferings."

___

KANJI SHIMIZU, Noh actor (Japanese traditional performance art) from Tokyo

"It has been over 70 years and it would have been great if the U.S. president could have come earlier. But I guess it means the world has finally become ready for such a visit, and I see this as such a good chance for peace. It would be great if it could lead to a chance for more people like him to give a message to the world to abolish nuclear weapons."

___

KO IL-KUK, 75, A-bomb survivor from South Korea

"President Obama will visit Hiroshima and lay flowers at the memorial for the atomic bombing victims in Hiroshima. We urge him also to come to the memorial dedicated for the Korean victims who died suffering from the heat over 4,000 degrees just like the rest of the victims and to commemorate their souls."

See 3 more photos