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Documentary archives personal accounts of Nagasaki A-bomb experience

The film, which can be accessed for free during the month of June, includes personal accounts from survivors of the Nagasaki atomic bombing that took place on August 9th, 1945, the official FilmDoo website states. (FilmDoo)
The film, which can be accessed for free during the month of June, includes personal accounts from survivors of the Nagasaki atomic bombing that took place on August 9th, 1945, the official FilmDoo website states. (FilmDoo)
The film, which can be accessed for free during the month of June, includes personal accounts from survivors of the Nagasaki atomic bombing that took place on August 9th, 1945, the official FilmDoo website states. (FilmDoo)
The film, which can be accessed for free during the month of June, includes personal accounts from survivors of the Nagasaki atomic bombing that took place on August 9th, 1945, the official FilmDoo website states. (FilmDoo)
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09 Jun 2022 06:06:09 GMT9
09 Jun 2022 06:06:09 GMT9

Arab News Japan

FilmDoo, a global media company utilizing innovative technology to deliver edutainment content, has created a film in commemoration of the 77th memorial of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki.

The film, which can be accessed for free during the month of June, includes personal accounts from survivors of the Nagasaki atomic bombing that took place on August 9th, 1945, the official FilmDoo website states.

“At FilmDoo, we wanted to send a reminder about the horrors of war.  We wanted to leverage the power of films in helping to convey this important message and to help create empathy and connection to people and subjects that we may have not experienced ourselves or seems distant to us,” FilmDoo CEO Weerada Sucharitkul told Arab News Japan.

Sucharitkul appreciates the importance of building empathy and showcasing stories and lessons from history to improve relations in the international community

In an interview about “KIND PEOPLE: UNTOLD STORIES OF THE NAGASAKI BOMBING,” Director Kazumi Matsumoto shared how he wanted to “preserve the voices of those who had never shared their experiences with the media, and began to search for such people,” according to the FilmDoo website.

Matsumoto emphasized the importance of film to preserve oral history, sharing how he “witnessed the persuasive power of the real voices of the people involved, and I strongly felt that these were voices that must be preserved,” he said in the interview.

The film can be accessed using this link: https://lnkd.in/e5E8pErS

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