This 392-Year-Old Bonsai Tree Survived the Hiroshima Atomic Blast & Still Flourishes Today: The Power of Resilience | Open Culture
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This 392-Year-Old Bonsai Tree Survived the Hiroshima Atomic Blast & Still Flourishes Today: The Power of Resilience
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May<br>28
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This 392-Year-Old Bonsai Tree Survived the Hiroshima Atomic Blast & Still Flourishes Today: The Power of Resilience
in History, Life | May 28th, 2024 2 Comments
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Image by Sage Ross, via Wikimedia Commons
The beautiful bonsai tree pictured above–let’s call it the Yamaki Pine Bonsai–began its journey through the world back in 1625. That’s when the Yamaki family first began to train the tree, working patiently, generation after generation, to prune the tree into the majestic thing it is today.
No doubt, over the centuries, the ancient bonsai witnessed many good and bad days in Japan–some highs and some lows. But nothing as low as what happened on August 6, 1945, when the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, devastating the city and leaving 140,000 civilians dead. The bomb exploded less than two miles from the Yamaki’s home. But defying the odds, the Yamaki Pine survived the blast. (It was protected by a wall surrounding the Yamaki’s bonsai nursery.) The family survived the blast too, suffering only minor cuts from flying glass.
Three decades later, in a rather remarkable act of forgiveness, the Yamaki family gifted the pine (along with 52 other cherished trees) to the United States, during the bicentennial celebration of 1976. Never did they say anything, however, about the traumas the tree survived. Only in 2001, when a younger generation of Yamakis visited Washington, did the caretakers at the United States National Arboretum learn the full story about the tree’s resilience. The tree survived the worst mankind could throw at it. And kept its beauty intact. Surely you can do the same when life sends lesser challenges your way.
You can get a closer look at the Yamaki pine in the video below.
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Related Content:
The “Shadow” of a Hiroshima Victim, Etched into Stone, Is All That Remains After 1945 Atomic Blast
Watch Chilling Footage of the Hiroshima & Nagasaki Bombings in Restored Color
The Art of Creating a Bonsai: One Year Condensed Condensed Into 22 Mesmerizing Minutes
The Art & Philosophy of Bonsai
by OC | Permalink | Comments (2) |
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Comments (2)
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Kristian Petterson says:
May 29, 2024 at 3:42 pm
See, this single tree survived a nuclear bomb — all you people with mental illness should be ashamed of yourself.
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Asta says:
May 31, 2024 at 10:30 am
Poignant story and a magnificent specie! (Just please correct the math, since this bonsai is almost 400-years old.)
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