California 14-year-old offers 3,000 paper cranes at Hiroshima's Sadako monument

A 14-year-old girl from California, Kyreece Imada, offered about 3,000 paper cranes at the Children's Peace Monument in Hiroshima's Peace Memorial Park as part of her peace-praying activities. Daughter of professional golfer Ryuji Imada from Hiroshima, she was inspired by the story of atomic bomb survivor Sadako Sasaki. Imada plans to return next year with cranes from other countries.

In late November 2025, Kyreece Imada visited Hiroshima and offered about 3,000 paper cranes folded by children at the Children's Peace Monument in Peace Memorial Park. At her California school, Imada learned about Sadako Sasaki and was shocked by the atomic bombing's horrors and long-term effects. Sadako, exposed to radiation at age 2 in Hiroshima, developed leukemia a decade later and died while folding paper cranes in hope of recovery. The monument, funded by her classmates and others, receives cranes from Japan and abroad.

In October, Imada taught around 100 school friends how to fold cranes and instructed children online in other states. In Hiroshima, she met an 83-year-old former elementary school classmate of Sadako's, who had also survived the bomb, and listened to her memories. "I'm going to tell my school friends that many people, including children, suffered from the bombing in Hiroshima," Imada said. "I want to collect paper cranes from not only Japan and the United States but also other countries, and come back to Hiroshima next year."

Her initiative highlights the importance of passing down atomic bomb memories to younger generations. Imada's father, Ryuji Imada, is a professional golfer from Hiroshima.

مقالات ذات صلة

Illustration of Rumiko Seya receiving the Yomiuri International Cooperation Prize, with symbolic peacebuilding elements in the background.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

روميكو سييا تحصل على جائزة يوميوري للتعاون الدولي لجهود بناء السلام

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

روميكو سييا، رئيسة المنظمة غير الربحية المعتمدة ريتش ألترناتيفز (REALs)، تم اختيارها لجائزة يوميوري للتعاون الدولي الـ32. تم الاعتراف بعملها في بناء السلام والأعمال الإنسانية في مناطق النزاع مثل سوريا وجنوب السودان. تركز على تطوير النساء والشباب كحاملي السلام.

Kazuko Sumitomo, a 69-year-old Kobe resident who lost her father in the Great Hanshin Earthquake, has devoted over a decade to reading picture books about disasters like the Great East Japan Earthquake to children. Her goal is to teach them that disasters are not someone else's problem. Through tales of past quakes, she shares personal tragedies and encourages preparedness.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

On January 4, 2026, a memorial ceremony marking the second anniversary of the Noto Peninsula Earthquake—which struck Ishikawa Prefecture on January 1, 2024, causing widespread devastation—was held in Wajima. The prefecture-hosted event drew 337 attendees, including bereaved families of victims from the quake and subsequent torrential rains, who observed a moment of silence. Survivor Atsuhiko Hayashi shared his remorse over losing his mother.

The Hiroshima District Public Prosecutors Office has decided not to indict a 33-year-old man arrested on suspicion of killing his 61-year-old mother, after determining he is mentally unfit to stand trial. The suspect allegedly stabbed his mother multiple times on August 21.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

A Kindai University student, Tsuyoshi Kitahara, has developed a gamified evacuation drill simulating a nighttime earthquake and tsunami. The first trial took place in Shimizu district, Kainan, Wakayama Prefecture, involving residents practicing escape with a simulated disabled person. Participants highlighted the need for better preparedness amid a potential 48-minute tsunami arrival.

Princess Kako, second daughter of Crown Prince Akishino, celebrated her 31st birthday on December 29. After receiving congratulations from senior officials including the chief of the Imperial Household Agency at her residence, she greeted Emperor Naruhito, Empress Masako, and Princess Aiko at the Imperial Palace. Before 11 a.m., she smiled and waved to people gathered along the road as she entered the palace grounds by car, then visited the Sento Imperial Palace on the Akasaka Estate in Moto-Akasaka to meet Emperor Emeritus Akihito and Empress Emerita Michiko.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Japan's ambassador to Cuba, Nakamura Kazhuito, highlighted his country's solidarity commitment through a one-million-dollar donation for water, sanitation, and maternal and child health in eastern Cuba.

 

 

 

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