it's my last day, and i've come to meet mariko higashino in hiroshima peace park.re, i felt compelled to find out about how people from the blast and the families that have followed actually deal with the aftermath of that. nice to meet you, lucy! konnichiwa! konnichiwa. could you audio describe where we are, mariko? mariko's mother and grandmother lived in hiroshima at the time of the bombing, and mariko has been sharing their story with the world. wow. i'm so sorry. is it this here as well? they were so young. they were the same age as me when i lost my eyesight. 0h... stifles sobs. there's so many names. does it keep going? sobs. yeah. oh, my god — i didn't know it was this big. thank you for showing me. even though i've lost one of my main senses, they didn't have the chance to start again and to figure out what their future was. you know, i owe it to them to have a future that is bright. 0h, 0k — to there? mm—hm, hold there — press? oh, wow! giggles. meeting mariko—san and learning about her family story and history... is this the symbol of hope? ..made me bel