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The Power of Paper Cranes

July 1st, 2009

by Priscilla Henken


paper-crane-by-markybonI recently got into the art of origami, specifically paper cranes, and have been practicing by making cranes of different sizes for my co-workers in my spare time. They love them and it gives me a chance to show off my new skill. Well, last week another co-worker from the other side of the building was in the Marketing Department and saw one of my particularly good specimens sitting on the desk of my boss. He was impressed and when he found out that I had made it he came to my office to tell me this story which has inspired hope for so many people across the world.


At the end of World War II when the U.S. dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, many people who survived ended up with severe radiation sickness and cancer. One such citizen was a young girl by the name of Sadako Sasaki. She was 2 when the bomb hit a little more than a mile from her home in Hiroshima. For the next 10 years she would struggle with health issues until finally in 1955, at age 12, she was diagnosed with leukemia and less than a year to live.


While she was in the hospital a friend brought her a square of golden paper, folded a crane out of it and told her the legend that if she could fold 1,000 paper cranes then she would get a wish. Sadako was inspired and began folding. Even though she had plenty of time in the hospital for folding, she lacked paper. She would use anything she could find and would even go into other patients rooms to ask for the paper from their get well presents. Her friends from school would bring her paper when they would come to visit but it still wasn’t enough. Sadako never finished her cranes. She died after spending 8 months in the hospital and making 644 cranes. After she died her friends and family got together, finished her cranes and buried all 1,000 with her.


Though Sadako did not finish her cranes, she had set something in motion. In the years since Sadako’s death there have been several books written about her legacy as well as a play and a few songs. There is a statue of Sadako holding a golden crane erected in Hiroshima as a memorial to her and the other children that lost their lives. All of this has morphed into a mass movement of the people of the world. Each year, millions gather across the world to fold paper cranes for peace and justice across the globe.


What came from Sadako’s suffering shows how one person can make a difference and that if people care it can lead to a huge movement for a common cause. This is a wonderful example of what it means to LIVE UNITED in your community. Imagine if we could be so moved in our community without having to let anyone hurt for any amount of time. We could change our community dramatically and it could even lead to a change in the world. All you have to do is go online and find out how you can volunteer your time to make a difference.

Flickr photo: MarkyBon

Advocacy, General, Volunteering , , , ,