Nuclear Museum Logo
Nuclear Museum Logo

National Museum of Nuclear Science & History

Keiko Ogura

Author, ActivistJapan

Hibakusha

Keiko Ogura is a hibakusha, an atomic bomb survivor. She was eight years old on August 6, 1945, when the US dropped the “Little Boy” atomic bomb on Hiroshima. In 1959, she graduated from Hiroshima Jogakuin University.

She married Kaoru Ogura, who served as director of the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum and passed away in 1979. After his death, she took up the mission to spread knowledge about the bombings and keep the survivors’ stories alive.

During the 2003 exhibition of the Enola Gay, she was the official interpreter for other hibakusha. Additionally, she established the Hiroshima Interpreters for Peace and published several books, including the Hiroshima Handbook, Hiroshima Peace Park Guide, Hip’s Hiroshima Guide and One Day in Hiroshima.

To view a 2019 interview with Keiko Ogura, please click here. For more on the work of Ogura please click here.

 

Related Profiles

Homer L. Allison

Los Alamos, NM

Thomas Farrell

Tinian Island

Thomas Farrell (1891 – 1967) was a major general in the US Army. Farrell was hand-picked by General Groves to serve as his deputy, or as the Deputy Commanding General of the Manhattan Project.

Emperor Hirohito

Japan

Hirohito (1901-1989), known posthumously as Emperor Shōwa, was emperor of Japan during World War II and is Japan’s longest-serving monarch in history.

Shigeko Uppuluri

Oak Ridge, TN

Shigeko Uppuluri was born in Kyoto, Japan and lived in Shanghai, China during World War II. She came to the United States for graduate school at Indiana University, where she met her husband, mathematician Ram Uppuluri.