Tag Archives: The Forgotten Bomb

NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT: Ken Burns got it wrong on Hiroshima, Nagasaki

Bud Ryanby Bud Ryan
Pax Christi New Mexico Co-coordinator

Like many people I first became aware of Ken Burns from his marvelous documentary The Civil War. It is a film that I have watched with wonder five or six times since it first aired and I still feel I learn something new each time I’ve watched it. As a rabid Baseball fan I was also intrigued by his Baseball documentary. I have also greatly admired his two latest documentaries Prohibition and National Parks, but where I think Mr. Burns got it wrong was with his World war II documentary The War.

Ken Burns has never been one to shy away from controversy in his films, nor share more info about our history than we ever learned in school. In The War he doesn’t run from telling the story of the Japanese Internment Camps, the segregated military or the hardships that Afro-Americans suffered by trying to get jobs at ship building centers like Mobile Alabama. We are shown the irony of fighting for freedom so people don’t have to live under the yoke of Nazi Germany and Imperialist Japan on the one hand, but denying it to our own citizens on the other. By shining a light on these inconsistencies the film bumps up directly against the patriotic way that most Americans view World war II. In fact for some, you could say the role of the U.S. in that war has taken on almost a sacred mission to restore freedom to subjugated people around the world.

I did not initially watch The War when it aired on PBS because of the way our actions in that war have taken on this sacred persona. I have come to believe because of my own Spirituality as a follower of the Nonviolent Jesus Christ, whom Gandhi called the greatest practitioner of Nonviolence in the history of the world, that ALL wars are wrong. I later bought a copy of the film and was very pleased as I watched the episodes unfold and Mr. Burns told the stories that would somewhat tarnish this sacred cow. He also showed the stark reality of the war by following several individuals and the horrifying times they lived in because of the war, and that despite the so-called glory that too many associate with combat, the real aspects of war are suffering and death. I also hoped that I might catch a glimpse of my Dad who was a medic in the wake of D-Day. As I watched in the back of my mind I was apprehensive to see the last chapter of this story, the dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which were supposedly needed to end the war, wondering how Mr. Burns would tell that part of the story.

My apprehension was because I knew that the reasons for dropping the atomic bombs were probably the most sacrosanct of all the stories from World war II. I knew from reading Gar Alperovitz’s book, The Decision To Use The Atomic Bomb, and from work on the documentary about nuclear weapons that I had made along with Stuart Overbey called The Forgotten Bomb (visit http://forgottenbomb.com to view the trailer), that it was a total fallacy that we had to use those weapons to win the war and that they had saved a million lives, including many Japanese. If anything, waiting to use the atomic bombs cost American lives. Having broken the Japanese codes we knew they were trying to surrender through the Soviet Union and the only thing they were requesting was the safety of the Emperor. When President Truman heard of the successful Trinity test of the first atomic bomb on July 16, 1945 he again insisted that Japan surrender “unconditionally”, and as the Emperor was seen as a god in Japan the war continued on to its horrific conclusion. So the question we should ask ourselves – how many U.S. soldiers died from when we first heard that Japan was looking to surrender until the official “unconditional” surrender on August 15th?

Unfortunately my apprehension proved to be warranted as Ken Burns took the company line regarding the dropping of the bombs. He had several stories from GIs who were horrified about the potential of having to invade the Japanese homeland, and who sincerely felt that the dropping of those atomic bombs saved their lives. But those are assumptions not based on the facts. In our film we have a clip of President Truman recounting his view of World war II and he says that the U.S. had planned to keep the Emperor all along as a means of controlling the Japanese people.

In The Forgotten Bomb we interview Ivan Olrich from the Federation of American Scientists, an organization that was started by many of the Manhattan Project scientists who attempted to get a petition to President Truman asking that there be a demonstration of the bomb for the Japanese high command before it was dropped on any city. Unfortunately the petition never got to Truman and there was no mention of this incident in The War. Mr. Olrich goes on to say that many people believe that the real reason for the dropping of the bombs was to impress the Soviets so they would not get out of line when the war came to an end.

Mr. Burns would certainly not be breaking new ground by putting any of these stories in his film. For the 50th anniversary of Hiroshima, Peter Jennings of ABC News produced a documentary with many of these stories in it prompted by the controversary over displaying the Enola Gaye at the Smithsonian. Many Veterans did not want to deviate from the myth regarding the bombings. Mr. Jennings saw the irony in the fact that one of the things these vets had fought for in the war, the truth, was being buried.

I hope that Mr. Burns will continue for many years to produce and direct documentaries of the quality of Not For Ourselves Alone: The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, which shine a light on our American story that is to often given short shrift in the history textbooks that we use in school. I also hope that like he did with Baseball he will add an addendum to The War so he will at least tell the other side of the atomic story and let his viewers make their own decision about whether we needed to drop the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki to win the war as Mr. Jennings did. This information is not only an important part of our own history, but of world history as well, as the atomic age started with those bombings. Can this story be told based on what some World war II Vets, who were certainly not privy to any of the intelligence of that time, and who thought that in an invasion of Japan they would lose their lives? Vets, who like the rest of us, have been propagandized into believing the bombs actually “saved” a million lives.

Bud Ryan is the co-coordinator of Pax Christi New Mexico and a filmmaker. His most recent film is The Forgotten Bomb.

FILM REVIEW: Renouncing the nuclear idol

by Art Laffin, in Tikkun

The Forgotten BombA Review of The Forgotten Bomb, a film by Bud Ryan and Stuart Overbey (available on DVD January 17, 2012) [Click here for order information]

When I first saw The Forgotten Bomb, I recalled the following words from Deuteronomy: “You shall not make for yourself an idol, whether in the form of anything that is in heaven above, or that is on the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth. You shall not bow down to them or worship them” (Deut. 5:8-9). This film is a stark reminder of how we, as a people, have betrayed our trust in God and, for sixty-six years, have instead placed our trust in a nuclear idol.

We have, in fact, become a nation that worships the bomb and glorifies war. As a consequence we find ourselves morally blind, psychically numb, and forgetful of the fact that nuclear weapons, deployed on land, air, and sea, still endanger all life and, in a matter of minutes, could destroy our planet and God’s sacred creation. I agree with the late Jesuit peacemaker, Father Richard McSorley, who said: “Our intention to use nuclear weapons destroys our souls. Our possession of them is a proximate occasion of sin.”

The Forgotten Bomb, produced by Bud Ryan and directed by Stuart Overbey, looks at the political and legal implications of nuclear weapons and also digs deeper into the cultural and psychological reasons behind the atomic bomb’s existence…

To read the entire review, click here.

ON THE LINE: March edition features PC members and groups in the news

Compiled by Johnny Zokovitch

Each month, “On The Line” features news items and announcements from around the nation featuring Pax Christi members, local groups, regions and partners. These are gleaned from articles in local newspapers, websites, magazines, and elsewhere. 

PAX CHRISTI FLORIDA MEMBER FASTS WITH FARMWORKERS: John Dwyer of Pax Christi Florida represented Pax Christi at the Coalition of Immokalee Worker’s Fast for Fair Food earlier this month. John fasted with farmworkers and their allies for 6 days outside of the headquarters of Publix Supermarkets, who are refusing to meet and work with the CIW to institute changes to improve the lives of farmworkers agreed to by other grocery and fast food giants. John wrote to say,” Just returned from my week’s fasting with the CIW in Lakeland at Publix.  Everyone from every faith was there… People came from everywhere.  Amazing.  Best fast I ever had.”

CIW Celebration

CIW Publix Picket/Jubilant Victory Celebration 2/12/12, following the announcement that any agreement with Trader Joe's was reached, photo by Karen Dwyer

PAX CHRISTI CPT MEMBER IN HEBRON UNDER THREAT: Since publication of the Christian Peacemaker Team’s report, “Under Attack: Golani Brigade’s war on the Palestinian population of Al-Khalil (Hebron),” the Israeli army’s Golani Brigade has threatened CPTers with arrest and death several times.  Pax Christi Indianapolis member, Jo Anne Lingle, is one of four Christian Peacemaker Team members recently sent to Hebron. The report documents the recent escalation of human rights abuses in Al Khalil.  These threats are an attempt to prevent CPT and other international organizations from continuing to document ongoing human rights abuses, including violence and harassment, committed by soldiers against the civilian population of Al-Khalil. Read more here: http://cpt.org/cptnet/2012/03/10/al-khalil-hebron-international-observers-under-threats-arrest-and-death-israeli-ar

PAX CHRISTI USA FOUNDING BISHOP-PRESIDENT ON MICHIGAN RADIO:Bishop Thomas Gumbleton probably won’t vote in the primary today, though he spends his life doing work that’s greatly affected by the political world. Nor does he seem impressed that Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum are fellow Roman Catholics. Actually, he seems pretty appalled by them.” To listen to the interview with Bishop Gumbleton, go to http://www.michiganradio.org/post/politics-other-means

PAX CHRISTI FLORIDA STATE COORDINATOR RECEIVES AWARD: Nancy O’Byrne, Pax Christi Florida State Coordinator received an award at the Catholic Days at the Capitol luncheon in Tallahassee, FL in February.  Nancy stated upon accepting the award, “I am deeply honored to receive this award today; and deeply grateful that I belong to a Church that has a long, rich history of Catholic Social Teaching, responding to the Gospel Mandate to stand up for the poor, the lowly, the disenfranchised and marginalized; be it a baby in a Mother’s womb; an undocumented worker trying to support his family; a prisoner on death row; or a refugee fleeing from war and oppression.  We are all called to raise our voices in support of the dignity of each human person and the care of all God’s Creation.” Nancy was nominated by Bishop Felipe Estevez to receive the Thomas A. Horkan, Jr. Distinguished Catholic Leader Award.

Nancy O'Byrne

Nancy O'Byrne, state coordinator of Pax Christi Florida, receives award. With her husband David and Bishop Estevez, photo courtesy of Pax Christi Florida

PAX CHRISTI METRO NEW YORK CELEBRATES DAN BERRIGAN: “Marvelous, the best thing I’ve seen, moving, enlightening, inspiring, fabulous, wonderful, beautifully done, a lovely event, a gift!  Such was just some of the praise given to the man and the tribute that over 200 people paid to the iconic priest, poet, and prophet, Fr. Daniel Berrigan on Sunday, January 29th, in St. Joseph’s Greenwich Village Church.  Fr. Berrigan turned 90 years old last May, and Pax Christi Metro New York (PCMNY) decided there could be no better subject for its Peacemaking through the Arts Winter Benefit than this influential man as he achieved this wonderful milestone.” Read more here: http://paxchristiusa.org/2012/03/14/regional-event-pax-christi-metro-new-york-hosts-berrigan-celebration/ or the NCR article here: http://ncronline.org/news/people/pax-christi-pays-tribute-berrigan-ny

TIFFIN-AREA PAX CHRISTI STAYS COMMITTED TO PEACE: “On March 15, 2004, a group of demonstrators gathered at the Seneca County Courthouse to protest the start of the war in Iraq. Initiated by members of Tiffin Area (OH) Pax Christi, that first vigil turned into a weekly event, usually at 4:30 p.m. Three women, Mary Lily and Phyllis Putnam of Tiffin and Jean Cossey of Carey, have faithfully appeared at least 30 minutes every Friday afternoon for the past eight years. ‘Actually, I had gone a couple times up to Toledo, because they had somebody that was standing with signs. Then we started here, so I came down here,’” Lily said. Read the entire article here: http://www.advertiser-tribune.com/page/content.detail/id/544613/Local-protesters-abandon-vigil–still-committed-to-peace.html?nav=5060#.T0vhBCO6Mh2.email

PAX CHRISTI PALM BEACH (FL) SENDS ANTI-NUKE FILM TO FL SENATORS: PC Palm Beach member, Jack MacFadyen, arranged for the video, The Forgotten Bomb, to be delivered to Florida’s two U.S. Senators.  The movie examines the political and legal implications of nuclear weapons, but also digs deeper, into the cultural and psychological reasons behind the arsenal’s existence.  Film producer Bud Ryan’s quest takes us from the homes of hibakusha (A-bomb survivors) in Japan, to an abandoned Uranium mine in New Mexico, to an underground Titan missile silo in Arizona. From these places, and many others, Ryan puts together the pieces of a puzzle that explain why we have the bomb, and how we might finally do away with it.

Upcoming Events:

PCUSA Ambassador of Peace Rev. John Dear, SJ will speak at Immaculate Heart of Mary Church in Atlanta, March 14. For more info, click here.

PC-Texas will host their Compassion Conference on March 23-24 in San Antonio, more information here: http://paxchristitexas.org/2012/02/08/2012-compassion-conference/

PC-Richmond (VA) will host a “Spring Day of Reflection: Exploring Relationships with Earth and Ourselves” with the Thomas Berry Educational Center, on April 14. Contact Ginnie Morrow at ginnie.morrow@yahoo.com.

PC-Florida will host their Spring Retreat in Parrish, FL on April 14 and 15. Retreat leader is Sr. Paula Gonzalez. For more info, click here.

PC-Michigan’s 31st annual state conference, “Power: Who Lies? Who Dies? Who Pays? Who Profits?” will be April 21 at St. Anastasia Church in Troy, MI. Pax Christi Ambassador of Peace Tom Cordaro and PCUSA Executive Director Sr. Patty Chappell are featured speakers. For more info, click here.

Quicklinks:

Pax Christi International sends a letter to Russia on the situation in Syria … Pax Christi Arizona members held vigils on the eve of an execution in Arizona earlier this month … Pax Christi Lansing (MI) is holding two special Lenten programs on March 20 and March 27 on the Occupy movement and immigration … JustFaith Ministries in collaboration with Pax Christi USA just released a special 12 session module for small groups on “Just Peacemaking.” There is a special discount for Pax Christi local groups wanting to purchase the module … Three plays written by playwright and Pax Christi member, Jack Gilroy, are now available as downloads for performance by churches, local groups, schools, etc. on the PCUSA website … PCUSA is seeking an Associate Director of Development … Pax Christi Metro DC participates in Ash Wendesday service at the White House … PC-New Jersey holds immigrant rights march on Ash Wednesday …

  • Send your news items, announcements, photos and links to stories about Pax Christi groups or members to johnnypcusa@yahoo.com.

ON THE LINE: February edition features PC members and groups in the news

Compiled by Johnny Zokovitch

Each month, “On The Line” features news items and announcements from around the nation featuring Pax Christi members, local groups, regions and partners. These are gleaned from articles in local newspapers, websites, magazines, and elsewhere. 

HAITI PROJECT UPDATE IN THE DIGITAL JOURNAL: Our colleagues in Haiti were happy to share this story with us: “The “Jaden Tap Tap” (Tap Tap Garden) urban community garden was proudly inaugurated on January 22, 2012 in Cite Soleil, Haiti. The Tap Tap Garden is Haiti’s largest urban garden containing more than 500 brightly painted tire gardens, flower garden, and a nursery of 1,000 trees. Nearly 600 community members, NGO’s, and government officials joined Bochika, SAKALA-Pax Christi Ayiti, and SOIL in celebrating the inauguration of the garden, as well as a new community Eco-San Toilet. The crowd was delighted to participate in the daylong event that featured a “farmers market”, agricultural demonstrations, musical and dance performances by local youth, and special appearance by internationally recognized Haitian recording artist, BelO.” Read more: http://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/568647#ixzz1lo5f8Z8H

Megan McKenna wins Hecker Award

Megan McKenna, PCUSA Ambassador of Peace, with godchild Megan, receiving the Hecker Award.

PCUSA AMBASSADOR OF PEACE WINS ISAAC HECKER AWARD: Pax Christi USA Ambassador of Peace Megan McKenna was honored in January in Boston with the Isaac Hecker Award, presented by the Paulists. At the award reception, it was stated, “Grounded in and informed by the meaning of Scripture, Megan’s writing tackles many of the issues of our day – much like the call of the 99% to reorder priorities, redistribute wealth, and attend to basic human needs.  She addresses the ever-widening economic and resource gaps nationally and internationally, the role of women in church and society, and the global challenges for use of our natural resources.  She offers a blueprint for contemporary analysis and action for social justice.” Read more at http://paxchristiusa.org/2012/02/08/ambassador-of-peace-megan-mckenna-receives-isaac-hecker-award/

FORMER PCUSA ED FEATURED IN THE ERIE TIMES: ”Dave Robinson lectured on global poverty as executive director of Pax Christi USA. His job took him to places like Iraq and Haiti, where he got an up-close look at the effects of poverty. But poverty was never too far from home for Robinson, who lives in Union Township. ‘You get past the beautiful landscapes and the friendly people, and we’re suffering out here in this rural part of the county,’ he said. ‘We have disproportionately high poverty rates. Lack of jobs, lack of transportation, pretty much any social problem that you want to focus on, we’ve got it right here.’ So when it came time for Robinson to decide whether to follow the national Catholic peace and justice movement from Erie to Washington, where Pax Christi moved its headquarters over the summer, he chose to stay in an area he loves while focusing his efforts on helping people in need in southeastern Erie County.” Read more at http://www.goerie.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2012301299819

Dave Atwood of Pax Christi Texas

Dave Atwood of PC-Texas speaks at a press conference in Houston for the Campaign to Promote Permanent Residency for Temporary Protective Status Beneficiaries from Central America. Photo courtesy of PC-Texas.

PC COLLEGE OF HOLY CROSS MEMBER DONATES HAIR: ”Kenilworth native Marielle McKenna is an active fundraiser for the St. Baldrick’s Foundation, an organization that funds pediatric cancer research grants. Recently, she decided she wanted to do something more for children with cancer. ‘A friend of mine shaved her head for St. Baldrick’s foundation and I thought she was crazy,’ McKenna said. ‘I thought donating her hair was going far enough and shaving was an unnecessary extreme. I thought I could never do something like that. Then after reflecting on it for a while and seeing how happy my friend was, I asked myself why couldn’t I do something like that? I went online to the Web site and signed up as a shavee.’”  Read more at http://wilmette.patch.com/articles/bald-is-beautiful-for-kenilworth-woman

PC TAMPA BAY COORDINATOR JOHN STEWART FEATURED IN COUNTERPUNCH ARTICLE ON NASA MISSION: ”John Stewart of Pax Christi-Tampa Bay maintained before the Curiosity launch: ‘NASA is planning a mission that could endanger not only its future but the state of Florida and beyond. The absurd—and maddening—aspect of this risk is that it is unnecessary. The locomotion for NASA’s Sojourner Mars rover, launched in 1996, and the Spirit and Opportunity Mars rovers, both launched in 2003, was solar powered, with the latter two rovers performing well beyond what their engineers expected. Curiosity’s locomotion could also be solar-powered. NASA admits this in its EIS, but decided to put us all at risk because plutonium-powered batteries last longer and they want to have the ‘flexibility to select the most scientifically interesting location on the surface’ of Mars.’” Read more at http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/01/16/the-toxic-crash-of-phobos-grunt/

LONGTIME PAX CHRISTI MEMBER MARY ALLICE PRATT DIES:Mary Alice Pratt, a longtime Central Kentucky social activist, died January 12. She would have turned 83 the next day. Ms. Pratt had worked for decades on social justice issues with the University of Kentucky Newman Center-Holy Spirit Parish; was active in the Central Kentucky Council for Peace and Justice; and once wrote and performed a one-woman show on the life of Dorothy Day, a co-founder of the Catholic Worker Movement, whose work greatly influenced Ms. Pratt.” Read more here: http://www.kentucky.com/2012/01/12/2026248/mary-alice-pratt-central-kentucky.html#storylink=cpy

TIFFIN AREA PC MEMBER GOES TO TRIAL FOR HOUSE ACTION: Josie Setzler, a peace activist and grandmother from Fremont, is one of five people on trial in D.C. Superior Court this week for disrupting congressional hearings to protest government treatment of Guantanamo Bay detainees. Ms. Setzler was one of 14 members of Witness Against Torture who stood up in the citizens’ gallery of the House of Representatives during deliberations June 23 on the defense authorization bill. It contained a measure to eliminate funding from any efforts to repatriate Guantanamo detainees… Ms. Setzler, 58, is charged with unlawful conduct, a misdemeanor. In addition to her membership in Witness Against Torture, she heads Tiffin Area Pax Christi and People for Peace and Justice Sandusky County. Read more at http://www.toledoblade.com/Courts/2012/01/04/Fremont-woman-among-5-on-trial-for-House-protest.html

Upcoming Events

  • PC-Minnesota’s winter gathering with PCUSA Teacher of Peace Bill Quigley, March 3, at St. Frances Cabrini Church in Minneapolis. For more info, click here.
  • PCUSA Ambassador of Peace Rev. John Dear, SJ will speak at Immaculate Heart of Mary Church in Atlanta, March 14. For more info, click here.
  • PC-Florida will host their Spring Retreat in Parrish, FL on April 14 and 15. Retreat leader is Sr. Paula Gonzalez. For more info, click here.
  • PC-Michigan’s 31st annual state conference, “Power: Who Lies? Who Dies? Who Pays? Who Profits?” will be April 21 at St. Anastasia Church in Troy, MI. Pax Christi Ambassador of Peace Tom Cordaro and PCUSA Executive Director Sr. Patty Chappell are featured speakers. For more info, click here.

Quicklinks

PC-Illinois World Peace Day event

Religious leaders hold a paper chain at PC- Illinois' World Peace Day event. Photo courtesy of PC-Illinois.

Blue Water (MI) Pax Christi’s Michael McCarthy on “Drones Come Home To Roost”… PC NJ coordinator Kathy O’Leary featured in Change.org article on one individual’s unjust detention … PC St. Francis Church (MD) coordinator Susan Kerin had a letter on Israeli-Palestinian issues published in the Washington Post … Pax Christi New York City launched a new website last month … Great online interview with former National Council member Donna Grimes … Art Laffin reviews PC NM co-coordinator Bud Ryan’s movie The Forgotten Bomb in Tikkun … Interested in joining the Pax Christi Anti-Racism Team? … Nominate someone for the Pax Christi USA National Council. Deadline is March 5 … An interview with Pax Christi member Sr. Rita Clare Gerardot was featured in NCR …

  • Send your news items, announcements, photos and links to stories about Pax Christi groups or members to johnnypcusa@yahoo.com.

FILM REVIEW: Renouncing the nuclear idol

by Art Laffin, in Tikkun

The Forgotten BombA Review of The Forgotten Bomb, a film by Bud Ryan and Stuart Overbey (available on DVD January 17, 2012)

When I first saw The Forgotten Bomb, I recalled the following words from Deuteronomy: “You shall not make for yourself an idol, whether in the form of anything that is in heaven above, or that is on the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth. You shall not bow down to them or worship them” (Deut. 5:8-9). This film is a stark reminder of how we, as a people, have betrayed our trust in God and, for sixty-six years, have instead placed our trust in a nuclear idol.

We have, in fact, become a nation that worships the bomb and glorifies war. As a consequence we find ourselves morally blind, psychically numb, and forgetful of the fact that nuclear weapons, deployed on land, air, and sea, still endanger all life and, in a matter of minutes, could destroy our planet and God’s sacred creation. I agree with the late Jesuit peacemaker, Father Richard McSorley, who said: “Our intention to use nuclear weapons destroys our souls. Our possession of them is a proximate occasion of sin.”

The Forgotten Bomb, produced by Bud Ryan and directed by Stuart Overbey, looks at the political and legal implications of nuclear weapons and also digs deeper into the cultural and psychological reasons behind the atomic bomb’s existence…

To read the entire review, click here.

NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT: The Forgotten Bomb released by Cinema Libre Studio

Cinema Libre Studio presents THE FORGOTTEN BOMB on DVD, TODAY, January 17, 2011! This timely documentary focuses on gathering a comprehensive perspective of the various sides of the nuclear weapons debate, while surveying the nuclear weapons cycle from the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki to its continuing effect on the world today.

See THE FORGOTTEN BOMB trailer at http://vimeo.com/33637505

When the Cold War ended, the generations that lived through it were relieved to finally vanquish the specter of a mushroom cloud from their minds. But today, thousands of nuclear weapons in the United States and Russia remain on high-alert, still poised to destroy the planet.

In a globe-trotting journey through various perspectives on nuclear weapons, filmmaker Bud Ryan takes us from the Peace Museums of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, to the “Nuclear Science” museums of the United States; to the place that birthed the atomic bomb, (and cares for it still) the state of New Mexico. Featuring former U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz, author Gar Alperovitz, Japanese bomb survivors, and many others.

DVD DETAILS:
SRP: $19.95 | TRT: 94 minutes | Street date: 1/17/11
UPC: 881394114326 | Catalog: CLS 1143
Genre: Documentary

Filmmakers Bud Ryan and Stuart Overbey are available for interview in person interview, please let me know if you would like me to make arrangements to speak with them. Email me at cbrewer@cinemalibrestudio.com.

NEWS: The Forgotten Bomb picked up for distribution

The Forgotten Bomb DVDNew Mexico filmmakers Bud Ryan (Executive Producer, Co-Director and Writer), and Stuart Overbey (Director, Producer and Editor) are pleased to announce their documentary; The Forgotten Bomb has been picked up for distribution by Cinema Libre based in California. Mr. Ryan and Ms. Overbey spent 3 years working on their film, which had them, shooting in Hiroshima and Nagasaki Japan, New York, Washington DC, San Francisco, Las Vegas, and Tucson as well as various places in New Mexico.

Two-­time Academy Award winning cinematographer, Haskell Wexler, recommended the movie to Cinema Libre after attending a screening of it at the 2011 
Albuquerque Film Festival. Cinema Libre will release the film on January 17, 2012 where it will be available for rent through popular VOD outlets 
such as iTunes and Netflix and available on DVD at major retail outlet.
The filmmakers will continue to be available to speak at community screenings.

“Our team is proud to be working with Bud and Stuart on the release of this film.
In this world led by those so motivated politically and economically by war, it reminds us that our ability to cause complete annihilation via WMD is not as important as our capability to prevent such destruction. This film inspires us to take charge of our future and do what is right,” said Richard Castro, VP of Distribution.

The documentary tells the story of the nuclear weapons cycle from uranium miners, scientists, lab workers, atomic veterans, hibakusha (Japanese bomb survivors) and down-winders. Some of the people interviewed for the film are former Reagan Secretary of State George Shultz, authors Jonathan Schell, Gar Alperovitz, and Jim Douglass, former Los Alamos National Laboratory Director Harold Agnew, Ivan Oelrich of the Federation of American Scientists, Dr. Mike McCally Executive Director of Physicians for Social Responsibility, Carletta Garcia former uranium miner from the Laguna Pueblo as well as Religious leaders Rabbi Michael Lerner, Fr. John Dear and Ryoshi Joan Halifax from the Upaya Zen Center in Santa Fe. One of the people featured in the film is Joni Arends, the Director of Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety located in Santa Fe, who shares her expertise about LANL.

For screener and interview requests contact: 
Cassie Brewer, cbrewer@cinemalibrestudio.com, 818-­349-8822. 

For screenings, grassroots and educational use contact: 
screening@cinemalibrestudio.com.