Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Catholic News ServiceAugust 08, 2017
Members of Catholic peace organizations gather outside the White House Aug. 6 to mark the 72nd anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan. The event, planned on the feast of the Transfiguration, called on the U.S. to lead the world toward total nuclear disarmament. (CNS photo/courtesy Dorothy Day Catholic Worker)

WASHINGTON (CNS) -- Saying the possession, upgrading and potential use of nuclear weapons are sinful, peacemakers gathered outside the White House on the feast of the Transfiguration and implored the U.S. government to empty its arsenals and embrace a world of peace.

"Nuclear weapons are immoral, illegal, anti-God, anti-life, anti-creation and have no right to exist," Art Laffin of Washington's Dorothy Day Catholic Worker community told the gathering Aug. 6, marking the 72nd anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan.

He said the feast of the Transfiguration invites the world to "say yes to the God of life, who commands us to love and not to kill, and no the forces of evil, death and destruction."

Laffin urged the group to recall that the anniversary was a time of "remembering the horror, repenting the sin and reclaiming a future without nuclear weapons" during the one-hour vigil just after sunrise.

The group included members of Catholic movements working to end nuclear weapons. They had gathered to "apologize" for the Hiroshima bombing, and for the bombing three days later of the Japanese city of Nagasaki Aug 9, 1945, both of which culminated in the death and maiming of hundreds of thousands of people, the peacemakers said.

The group had gathered to apologize for the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

As they gathered, representatives of organizations such as the Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns, Pax Christi USA and the Columban Center for Advocacy and Outreach placed photos of the destruction and the Japanese victims of the bombing on the street in front of the presidential mansion, calling it a "shrine of remembrance."

Participants were invited to recommit their lives to "disarming and dismantling the machinery of mass destruction" and offered an apology to bombing survivors, known as Hibakusha.

Red and white roses were distributed to participants during the event. The red roses were said to symbolize the sacredness of life and the grief and suffering caused by war and the atomic bombings. The white roses were said to symbolize hope and the commitment to work for a nonviolent world.

Laffin criticized the U.S. commitment to spend $1 trillion during the next three decades to modernize its nuclear arsenal. He said such spending is "a direct theft from the poor."

"If the U.S. is to ever truly lead the way to real disarmament, it must first repent for the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Then and only then can the U.S. legitimately ask other nuclear nations to disarm," he said.

"If the U.S. is to ever truly lead the way to disarmament, it must first repent for the nuclear bombings."

Since the end of World War II, U.S. and political leaders have maintained that nuclear weapons are necessary and serve as a deterrent to potential attacks from other countries.

The peacemakers planned a second vigil Aug. 9 at the Pentagon to recall the anniversary of the bombing of Nagasaki.

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

Blessed Carlo Acutis offers a counterexample for our digital age: a teenager who embraced technology not as an escape, but as a tool for communion—with others, and with God.
Grace LenahanJune 06, 2025
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney attends an event at the Liberal Party election night headquarters in Ottawa April 29, 2025. (OSV News photo/Jennifer Gauthier, Reuters)
“Carney is responding to the [immigration] backlash but also to the Trump effect, which is placing more pressure on Canada to tighten its border.”
Grace CoppsJune 06, 2025
The war in Gaza has become one in which “the heart-rending price is being paid by children, the elderly and the sick.” Israel, along with its allies, especially including the United States, must reckon that cost as well.
The EditorsJune 06, 2025
But as Catholic women, we are called to embrace our bodies, with all their changes—hormonal or otherwise—and not to hide from what they reveal at different stages.
LuElla D'AmicoJune 06, 2025