‘I remember’

Dennis Fujimoto/The Garden Island

Rev. Mieko Majima of the Kapaa Hongwanji Mission speaks with Takako Decker and Hiroko Kunioka, Monday following the Mokuto Shiki ceremony at the Moikeha Building where victims of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki were honored and remembered along with victims of the more recent floods and landslides.

Dennis Fujimoto/The Garden Island

Hiroko Kunioka offers an orizuru to the growing collection that will be displayed during Matsuri Kauai festival in September.

Dennis Fujimoto/The Garden Island

Rev. Kohtoku Hirao of the Waimea Shingon Mission leads the Mokuto Shiki service that allows Hiroko Kunioka and Takako Decker, both survivors of the atomic bombings in Japan, to offer incense, Monday at the Moikeha Building.

Dennis Fujimoto/The Garden Island

Hiroko Kunioka and Takako Decker join others in offering prayers during the Mokuto Shiki ceremony, Monday remembering and honoring those who lost lives during the atomic bombings.

LIHUE — On Aug. 6, 1945, at 8:15 a.m., Hiroko Kunioka’s grandmother was in Hiroshima with her nephew. That was when the United States dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima.

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