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TOPIC: dark tourism

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Too Soon? Ukraine's War Crime Tours And The Limits Of "Dark Tourism"

It took decades to transform Hiroshima and Auschwitz into authorized destinations that welcomed visitors to explain the sites of unspeakable horrors. Ukraine is encouraging people to see such places as Bucha and Irpin, where Russia is accused of war crimes. Exploring the line between the morbidity of dark tourism and the value of historical memory.

Seventy-seven years after the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, instantly killing 70,000 people and poisoning tens of thousands more, the city has become one of the top family tourist destinations in Japan. Already so far in 2023, more than 1.1 million people have visited the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, coming to interact with the location and its collection of raw witness testimonies, as well as see the human shadows imprinted upon the remaining walls where people were instantly obliterated by the blast.

The interest in the site was virtually immediate in the wake of the bomb, first with scientists and journalists arriving to document the unprecedentedly scarred Japanese city — and eventually human rights activists and curiosity seekers bearing witness to such massive and momentous death.

The first public display of atomic bomb materials in Hiroshima came four years later, with visitors drawn to what came to be known as “A-Bomb Dome”, an Exhibition Hall that had survived despite being directly under the blast. Indeed, the Dome was bound to become the centerpiece of the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park as the ruin’s preservation was eventually made a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The story of Hiroshima over the past seven decades exemplifies the evolution of what is known as "dark tourism," where a recent site of death and destruction eventually becomes an institutionalized historical destination.

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