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IPA Institute for Public Accuracy - News Release
9/11 Families on Hiroshima and Nagasaki Anniversaries
August 2, 2005
August 6 and 9 will be the 60th anniversaries of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki. The following members of September 11th Families for Peaceful
Tomorrows have been visiting Japan.
ANDREA LEBLANC
LeBlanc lost her husband, Robert LeBlanc, Professor Emeritus
of Geography at the University of New Hampshire, on United Airlines
Flt. 175. Today she said: "The Hibakusha and other Japanese people
were the first to extend the hand of compassion to those of us
who chose not
to seek vengeance for the lives of our loved ones after September
11th. A very special bond of understanding has developed among
us."
LeBlanc is coordinator of "Stonewalk," where 9/11 family members
-- along with atomic bomb survivors [Hibakusha] -- have been pulling a
granite memorial "to the unknown civilians killed in war" from
Nagasaki to Hiroshima. She will be addressing the World Conference Against
Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs in Hiroshima, where she will read an apology
that begins as follows: "We Americans today apologize for the atrocities
of Aug. 6 and 9, 1945, committed against the civilians of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki. ... We grieve for all victims of war and violence
inflicted by nations upon nations, individuals upon individuals, and societies
upon
societies."
BOB AND HELEN MCILVAINE
Their oldest son, Bobby McIlvaine, had just been hired by Merrill
Lynch as Assistant Vice President of Media Relations when he
was killed at the World Trade Center at age 26. Today, Bob McIlvaine
said: "The
loss of our son Bobby on 9/11 has been indescribably painful. Joining
in 'Stonewalk' has given me the only true moments of peace I've experienced
since he was killed. My wife Helen and I are honored to walk with the
Hibakusha and all those dedicated to finding and creating a more just
world." The McIlvaines reside in Oreland, in the Philadelphia suburbs.
DERRILL BODLEY
A professor of music and educational technology, Bodley lost
his 20-year-old daughter, Deora, on Flt. 93, which crashed near
Shanksville, Pennsylvania, on Sept. 11, 2001. He has just returned
to the U.S. from
Japan after participating in Stonewalk. [He will be in D.C. on
Aug. 2.] Bodley said today: "My wish, along with all other Peaceful
Tomorrows participants, is that ... the stone will find a home
in Japan that will
place it near to the Hiroshima Peace Park, where it can be seen
as a 21st century testament to the truth of all the 20th century
expressions of
peace that are found there in Hiroshima. The world deserves to
know and remember this, not the horrors of the wars that are
perpetrated today
through lies and deceit and because of lust for power and greed."
A song Bodley wrote and dedicated to his daughter
Deora Bodley will be sung in the closing ceremony of Peaceful
Tomorrows' Stonewalk Japan 2005. "Deora
-- Steps to Peace (Each to Give)" will be sung in a Japanese version
which was translated and recorded by one of Bodley's students
in America who is from Japan, Ms. Aiko Hamaguchi.
For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167
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