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STEVE NGUYEN: We're here at UC Irvine for the HIBAKUSHA college tour. We're doing our fourth round right now.
and it's been crazy!
The response after the LA screening was...
amazingly phenomenal! We've gotten a lot of feedback
a lot of good feedback!
I'm just happy that people want to see it! And the students especially, you know...
I'm doing this for them.
so I'm really excited to see what happens.
and how they respond to it. So I'm excited! Let's go and see what's happening.
ALLEN: Right now, we're here at UCI and we're about to open the doors up
to have our HIBAKUSHA screening.
Here's the
program coordinator that put this together.
Her name is Alison.
ALISON: It's been very difficult, but I'm really excited. I think it's going to be very rewarding to see all the people.
Promote awareness about this really interesting issue.
SUMMER: I thought it was a very moving piece.
My knowledge of the atomic bombings was limited to high school textbooks.
So this piece really brought perspective. Really opened my eyes to the atomic bomb.
and it also gave it a really personal touch.
It was... really powerful.
Like I took a tour of Japan and took a class last year, and I got the same kind of feeling.
You guys really captured that.
I'm really glad that you guys did this video, in an anime style too.
It really captures the modern sense and it really speaks to us in the younger generation.
It was just really powerful.
AUDIENCE: No more hibakusha. No more any war. May peace prevail on earth.