
Overview
Some 6,500 children are believed to have lost their parents when the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima Prefecture in 1945. Many wandered the streets. Some died of hunger and disease, but others were able to survive thanks to helping hands. A number of Americans backed a movement to support the orphans. In South Korea, poor people helped a parentless child with love, as if they were all family. The program shows the goodwill that war could not destroy.
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3 - 1A Doctor Beside the Deathbed January 12, 2019
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3 - 2Epic Challenge: A Race Across the Japanese Alps January 19, 2019
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3 - 3Reviving Kumamoto Castle February 09, 2019
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3 - 4Class Struggle: Changes to China's Education System February 16, 2019
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3 - 5A Vanished Dream: Wartime Story of My Japanese Grandfather March 16, 2019
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3 - 6Vessel of Friendship: An Untold Story March 30, 2019
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3 - 7
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3 - 8
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3 - 9
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3 - 10A Journey through Genders July 06, 2019
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3 - 11Bettering Tibet July 20, 2019
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3 - 12I too was a Child of Camp. August 17, 2019
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3 - 13Hope in the Dark August 24, 2019
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3 - 14MATAGI - Worshipping Bears September 14, 2019
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3 - 15Helping Hands - The Lives of Atomic Bomb Orphans September 21, 2019
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3 - 16The United Red Army: A Troubled Legacy September 28, 2019
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3 - 17The Lives of Japanese War Brides in America: Part 1 October 05, 2019
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3 - 18The Lives of Japanese War Brides in America: Part 2 October 12, 2019
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3 - 191971 - Japanese Rugby Takes On England, And The World October 19, 2019
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3 - 20Chinese Internet Celebrities: Influencing the Huge Online Market November 09, 2019
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3 - 21Henoko: Living with an American Base November 16, 2019
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3 - 22Digging the Untold History December 14, 2019
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