Episode 235: The Girls, their Teachers, their Parents

第235集:女孩们、她们的老师们、她们的家长们

the memory palace

2025-08-08

14 分钟
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单集简介 ...

Order The Memory Palace book now, dear listener. On Bookshop.org, on Amazon.com, on Barnes & Noble, or directly from Random House. Or order the audiobook at places like Libro.fm. The Memory Palace is a proud member of Radiotopia from PRX. Radiotopia is a collective of independently owned and operated podcasts that’s a part of PRX, a not-for-profit public media company. If you’d like to directly support this show, you can make a donation at Radiotopia.fm/donate.  Music Joy, by Jeffrey Cantu-Ledesma The Cradle by Frederico Albanese Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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  • This is the Memory Palace.

  • I'm Nate DiMaio.

  • What are we supposed to do with the 541 girls, the seven teachers,

  • who weren't in class that morning, as was so often the case that summer?

  • The war was being lost, their writing was on the wall, if not in the official propaganda.

  • The Americans were firebombing ports and factories and airfields, lately whole cities.

  • Their city hadn't been attacked yet, but it was a matter of time.

  • So their principal had decided that helping prepare Hiroshima for the inevitable arrival of American bombers was more important than geometry or poetry.

  • The girls, 12 and 13 years old, were put to work trying to limit destruction and save lives.

  • They were given shovels and helmets and hatchets and work gloves,

  • gray jumpsuits, and they pitched in, demolishing and clearing wooden structures.

  • to make fire breaks, so when the bombs came and the buildings burned,

  • the fire wouldn't spread in the ways that it had in Kobe and Nagoya and Osaka and Yokohama that spring.

  • Toyama, an industrial town on the west coast,

  • home to 160,000 people, its factories made steel and aluminum,

  • but its houses, most of its buildings, like in Hiroshima, were made of wood.

  • American bombers appeared over Toyama.

  • The whole city burned to the ground.

  • That was August 1st,

  • less than a week before the girls were out working one morning, breaking up lumber,