翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Shin'asahi, Shiga
・ Shin'en (spacecraft)
・ Shin'en Multimedia
・ Shin'etsu Main Line
・ Shin'etsu region
・ Shin'ichi
・ Shin'ichi Hisamatsu
・ Shin'ichi Ishiwata
・ Shin'ichi Nojiri
・ Shin'ichi Suzuki
・ Shin'ichi Tanaka
・ Shin'ichirō
・ Shin'ichirō Nakamura
・ Shin'inotani Dam
・ Shin'onsen, Hyōgo
Shin's Tricycle
・ Shin'ya Fujiwara
・ Shin'ya Waku
・ Shin'yaku Kegonkyō Ongi Shiki
・ Shin'yoshitomi, Fukuoka
・ Shin'yō Maru incident
・ Shin'yō Wakashū
・ Shin'yō-class suicide motorboat
・ Shin, Iran
・ Shin, Swat
・ Shin, Syria
・ Shin-Akitsu Station
・ Shin-Aomori Station
・ Shin-Asahi Station
・ Shin-Asahikawa Station


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Shin's Tricycle : ウィキペディア英語版
Shin's Tricycle

''Shin's Tricycle'' is a children's book by , first published in Japanese in 1992 as and in its English translation in 1995. It relates the true story of (Shin), a three-year-old boy who was killed in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan on August 6, 1945.
==Synopsis==

Kodama, himself a survivor of the bombing of Hiroshima, narrates the story from the point of view of Shin's father, . Shinichi is playing on his tricycle when the bomb is detonated. Nobuo finds the barely alive Shin still holding onto the tricycle's handlebars and trapped under the rubble of their destroyed home. Nobuo's efforts to save his son are in vain and Shin dies that evening. Nobuo buries Shin with his tricycle.
Forty years later, Nobuo exhumes Shin and his two sisters, who also died in the bombing, in order to give them a proper burial at a cemetery. While digging everything up, a pipe was found, believed to be a part of the tricycle Shinichi had owned. Not long after, they found skeletal remains of two human hands; the remains were identified as Shinichi and his local friend, Kimiko, who had died together with him, holding his hand. Nobuo donated the tricycle to the Hiroshima Peace Museum, where it is currently on display.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Shin's Tricycle」の詳細全文を読む



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