Sadako was 2 years old when she was exposed to radiation from the bomb. While hospitalized, she made 1,500 origami cranes with medicine wrapping paper and other materials to pray for her recovery.
Empress Sadako (1884-1951), posthumously known as Empress Teimei, visited Ise Jingu shrine on Nov. 5, 1922, to pray for the recovery of her husband, Emperor Yoshihito (1879-1926), posthumously ...
One of the most tragic human stories that emerged from the United States' atomic bombing of Hiroshima in 1945 is that of Sasaki Sadako. She died aged 12 from leukemia ― believed to be linked to ...
Sadako Ogata worked on some of the largest crises of the decade during her time in service from 1991 to 2000. Challenges included helping Kurdish refugees fleeing from Iraq after the 1991 Gulf War ...
However, the three sisters could not escape the curse of Sadako ridden, bizarre roommate Lena died. Desperate two sisters, decided to ask for help to deal with Bunshinsaba Sadako, only to provoke ...
Asakawa investigates the source of the video and finds it is connected to a dead girl named Sadako, who might have created it ...
Before becoming High Commissioner, Sadako Ogata held positions in the United Nations, chairing the UNICEF Executive Board and serving on the UN Commission on Human Rights as its independent expert on ...
Learn how the ACE Club exceeded its goal of folding 1,000 paper cranes to inspire peace, inclusion, and community ... Read ...
Japanese diplomat Sadako Ogata, the first woman to serve as UN High Commissioner for Refugees, has died. She was 92 years old. Ogata was born in Tokyo in 1927, the great-granddaughter of former ...
Ayaka Ichijo is a graduate student with an IQ of 200 who tries to investigate the strange deaths happening nationwide after people supposedly watched a cursed video and her younger sister also did ...