This is the man who survived both Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombs — and lived until 93

By @shanecroucher

Tsutomu Yamaguchi, who died aged 93 in 2010, is the only person officially recognised by the Japanese government as having survived both the atomic bomb raids on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, August 1945(JIJI PRESS/AFP/Getty Images)

The combined death toll of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings by the US during the Second World War is thought to be as high as 250,000. The combined payload of the two bombs — Little Boy in Hiroshima and Fat Man in Nagasaki — was equivalent to 36,000 tonnes of TNT.

One man survived in the ground zero of both attacks 70 years ago. And he lived until the age of 93. Tsutomu Yamaguchi may be the luckiest and unluckiest man to have ever lived.

On 6 August 1945, Yamaguchi was in Hiroshima on a business trip for the firm at which he worked as an engineer. That morning, he set out to the city’s shipyard to say farewell to his colleagues at Mitsubishi Heavy Industries before heading home from the three-month trip.

“It was very clear, a really fine day, nothing unusual about it at all,” he recalled in 2005. “I was in good spirits. As I was walking along I heard the sound of a plane, just one. I looked up into the sky and saw the B-29, and it dropped two parachutes. I was looking up at them, and suddenly it was like a flash of magnesium, a great flash in the sky, and I was blown over.”

The US Air Force pilots of the Enola Gay had just dropped Little Boy in the first time a nuclear weapon has ever been used in warfare. Yamaguchi told Australia’s ABC news he “thought the sun had fallen from the sky”.

Just two miles from the centre of Little Boy’s devastating blast, Yamaguchi was badly burnt, hairless and partially deaf from burst eardrums. Wounded, he spent the night in an air raid shelter. The following day, he made his way home, to Nagasaki.

“The river bridges were down,” according to a 2010 profile of Yamaguchi in The Economist. “But one river was full of carbonised naked bodies of men, women, children, floating face-down ‘like blocks of wood’, and on these — part treading, part paddling — he got to the other side. His human raft.”

A burnt-out fire engine is seen in the rubble of the Hiroshima aftermath.(Getty)

Bandaged up and suffering from his exposure to radiation, Yamaguchi was nonetheless back at work on 9 August, telling his sceptical boss exactly what had happened in Hiroshima and describing the scale of the devastation, a city swallowed whole by one single bomb.

As he was talking, and his supervisor was calling him “crazy”, a white light burst through the window and filled the room. American pilots of the Bockscar B-29 bomber had just unloaded Fat Man on Nagasaki. Yamaguchi had been hit again. “I thought the mushroom cloud had followed me from Hiroshima,” he told The Independent in a 2009 interview from his home in Nagasaki, rebuilt after the war.

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