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Encyclopedia :
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JAP :
Japanese Peace Bell |
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Japanese Peace BellThe Japanese Peace Bell (cast on October 24, 1952) was a gift of the people of Japan ("People of Nippon") to the United Nations on June 8, 1954 (despite that Japan had not yet been admitted to the United Nations). It was presented to the United Nations by the United Nations Association of Japan. The Peace Bell is housed in a Japanese cypress wood structure, resembling a Shinto shrine, in New York City at 42nd Street and First Avenue. Israel donated the base of stone for the structure. Inscribed, in Japanese, are the words (on one side of the bell):
: "The bell embodies the aspiration for peace not only of the Japanese but of the peoples of the entire world. Thus it symbolized the universality of the United Nations." A wooden hammer was presented in 1977. A bell cord was presented (and blessed by Shinto priests) on March 20, 1990 (Earth Day). Traditionally, the bell is rung twice a year: The bell was tolled on October 4, 1966 (the Feast Day of St. Francis, which marked the one year anniversary of Pope Paul VI's visit to the United Nations). In 1994, a ceremony marking the fortieth anniversary of the Japanese Bell occurred. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali said at the ceremony: The bell is the setting for the annual Earth Day ceremony (initiated by Earth Day Founder, John McConnell). The Tada Factory in Japan completed the bell on United Nations Day (and it was cast by Chiyoji Nakagawa). The bell went briefly to Osaka, Japan as part of Expo 1970 and then returned to its permanent New York location. A stamp series of the Japanese Peace Bell, designed by Ole Hamann of Denmark, was issued in 1970 as part of the United Nations Postal Service's Art at the United Nations series. The stamps were printed by the Government Printing Bureau of Tokyo. External links
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