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80 Years of Silence Ends: Uncovering Nagasaki Atomic Bomb POW Stories 2025

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Discover the forgotten Nagasaki atomic bomb POW stories 2025. On the 80th anniversary, descendants of Dutch and Allied prisoners reveal the brutal reality of the 1945 blast.

The world remembers the mushroom cloud, but for hundreds of Allied prisoners, it was the ceiling of their prison collapsing. According to the Associated Press, as we mark the 80th anniversary of the bombing in 2025, the hidden history of Allied POWs in Nagasaki is finally being brought to light by determined descendants and researchers.

Nagasaki Atomic Bomb POW Stories 2025: Victims Behind the Wire

During the war, about 36,000 Allied prisoners were shipped to Japan to fill labor shortages. Many were transported on notorious 'hell ships' to camps in Nagasaki, including Fukuoka No. 2 and No. 14. These men, mostly from the Netherlands, the U.S., and Australia, were forced into slave labor at the Kawanami shipyard before the plutonium bomb 'Fat Man' detonated on August 9, 1945.

The Day the Sky Turned Purple

At Fukuoka No. 2, located 10 kilometers from ground zero, prisoners watched a triple-layered mushroom cloud rise. However, Fukuoka No. 14 was much closer; the blast leveled its brick buildings, killing eight captives instantly. Survivors recalled jumping into bunkers only to find their comrades suffering from severe radiation burns and fatal injuries.

Atomic bomb dropped; 8 POWs killed at Camp No. 14.
POWs officially notified of Japan's surrender.
Surviving POWs leave Nagasaki for the Philippines.
80th-anniversary memorial ceremony held in Nagasaki.

The fight for recognition has been long. While Japan has offered apologies, many victims like Johan Willem Schram felt their suffering was largely ignored by both the Japanese and their own governments. Today, only 11 former POWs have successfully received official survivor certificates, a testament to the administrative hurdles faced by those outside Japan.

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