
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The word “Hiroshima” may bring to mind a black-and-white image of a mushroom cloud. It’s easy to forget that it’s an actual city with a million people and a popular baseball team. In 1995, John Biewen visited the city to speak with survivors and to ask: What did the world’s first atomic bombing mean in the place where it happened?
Hearing Hiroshima is a production of Minnesota Public Radio, from American Public Media.
Photo: Selections from the 1995 tapes. Photo by John Biewen.
By Kenan Institute for Ethics at Duke University4.9
1083810,838 ratings
The word “Hiroshima” may bring to mind a black-and-white image of a mushroom cloud. It’s easy to forget that it’s an actual city with a million people and a popular baseball team. In 1995, John Biewen visited the city to speak with survivors and to ask: What did the world’s first atomic bombing mean in the place where it happened?
Hearing Hiroshima is a production of Minnesota Public Radio, from American Public Media.
Photo: Selections from the 1995 tapes. Photo by John Biewen.

91,048 Listeners

43,977 Listeners

38,475 Listeners

6,784 Listeners

43,730 Listeners

27,206 Listeners

21,628 Listeners

9,193 Listeners

10,748 Listeners

8,358 Listeners

11,891 Listeners

10,171 Listeners

14,634 Listeners

16,241 Listeners

16,097 Listeners