Author to discuss Hiroshima at BCC lecture Author to discuss Hiroshima at BCC lecture

Hideko Tamura Snider was just 10 years old, playing at home just over a mile from downtown Hiroshima, when an atomic bomb destroyed her residence, her family and almost everything else around her.

Hideko Tamura Snider was just 10 years old, playing at home just over a mile from downtown Hiroshima, when an atomic bomb destroyed her residence, her family and almost everything else around her.

Snider will recount the events of that day as well as her subsequent dedication to a life of healing and hope in a free, public lecture Oct. 7 at Bellevue Community College.

Entitled, “The Consequences of Nuclear Use and the Role of Hope: A Personal Testimony,” the lecture will begin at 7 p.m., immediately following an open reception at 6:30.

Both events will take place in BCC’s student union building (Building C on the college’s main campus, 3000 Landerholm Circle S.E., Bellevue, at the intersection of S.E. 28th St. and 148th Ave. S.E.).

Snider is the author of the book, One Sunny Day (Open Court Publishing, 1996), an account of her life before, during and after Aug. 6, 1945 – in her words, “the day the sun and the earth melted together.”

Now a resident of Medford, Ore., Snider has dedicated he life to healing, in part through a career as a psychiatric social worker in Chicago.

Her Oct. 7 lecture is co-sponsored by several BCC programs and organizations (UNICEF of BCC, Center for Liberal Arts, BCC Reads! program, Sakura Club, Campus Activities Board and Associated Student Government) in cooperation with the Lake Washington Japanese-American Citizen’s League.

For further information please contact Nora Lance at 425-564-6150 or nlance@bellevuecollege.edu.

Hideko Tamura Snider was just 10 years old, playing at home just over a mile from downtown Hiroshima, when an atomic bomb destroyed her residence, her family and almost everything else around her.

Snider will recount the events of that day as well as her subsequent dedication to a life of healing and hope in a free, public lecture Oct. 7 at Bellevue Community College.

Entitled, “The Consequences of Nuclear Use and the Role of Hope: A Personal Testimony,” the lecture will begin at 7 p.m., immediately following an open reception at 6:30.

Both events will take place in BCC’s student union building (Building C on the college’s main campus, 3000 Landerholm Circle S.E., Bellevue, at the intersection of S.E. 28th St. and 148th Ave. S.E.).

Snider is the author of the book, One Sunny Day (Open Court Publishing, 1996), an account of her life before, during and after Aug. 6, 1945 – in her words, “the day the sun and the earth melted together.”

Now a resident of Medford, Ore., Snider has dedicated he life to healing, in part through a career as a psychiatric social worker in Chicago.

Her Oct. 7 lecture is co-sponsored by several BCC programs and organizations (UNICEF of BCC, Center for Liberal Arts, BCC Reads! program, Sakura Club, Campus Activities Board and Associated Student Government) in cooperation with the Lake Washington Japanese-American Citizen’s League.

For further information please contact Nora Lance at 425-564-6150 or nlance@bellevuecollege.edu.