Inspirant
Le garçon qui porte son frère décédé sur le dos
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“This boy was carrying his dead brother on his back to bury him In Japan, during the war. A soldier noticed him and asked him to throw away the dead child so that he would not get tired. The boy replied: He's not heavy, that's my brother!" The soldier understood and broke down in tears. Since then, this image has become a symbol of unity in Japan.
Let this be our motto too in 2025:
“He's not heavy. He's my brother...She's my sister!"
If he falls, raise him up.
If he backslides, restore him.
If he gets tired, help him.
If he needs support stand with him.
If he makes a mistake, correct him.
And if the world abandons him, then carry him like God has been carrying you, He's surely not heavy.
Because he is my brother or she is my sister!
Look out for one another!
Stay Blessed. COPIED ✅👌🙏
Let's look out for each other 🤗 in 2025, let's spread love and not hatred ✅🙏
Let's use this last two days as sober reflection and I believe,2025 will be an amazing year for us all ✅🤗🙏
#love #kindness #humanity #peace

Le débunk
❌ FAKE
This photo was taken by Joe O'Donnell in front of the Nagasaki crematorium in September 1945, just days after the atomic bomb devastated the city.
The photographer recounted the moment:
"I saw a boy about ten years old walking by. He was carrying a baby on his back (...)
The men in white masks walked over to him and quietly began to take off the rope that was holding the baby. That is when I saw that the baby was already dead. The men held the body by the hands and feet and placed it on the fire. The boy stood there straight without moving, watching the flames. He was biting his lower lip so hard that it shone with blood. The flame burned low like the sun going down. The boy turned around and walked silently away."
This photo was published in 1995 in the book “Japan 1945”.
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_boy_standing_by_the_crematory
https://www.amazon.fr/Japan-1945-Photographs-ODonnell-2008-04-15/dp/B01MR0L91R
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❌ FAUX
La photo a été prise par Joe O’Donnell devant le crématorium de Nagasaki en septembre 1945 (quelques jours après la bombe atomique qui y a explosé).
Voici le récit du photographe :
« J'ai vu passer un garçon d'une dizaine d'années. Il portait un bébé sur son dos (...) J'ai compris que le bébé était déjà mort. Les hommes ont saisi le corps par les mains et les pieds, puis l'ont placé sur le feu. Le garçon est resté immobile, droit, observant les flammes sans bouger. Il mordait sa lèvre inférieure si fort qu'elle saignait. La flamme brûlait doucement, tel un soleil couchant. Une fois le corps incinéré, le garçon s'est retourné et est parti en silence. »
Cette photo a été publiée en 1995 dans le livre « Japon 1945 ».
Sources :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_boy_standing_by_the_crematory
https://www.amazon.fr/Japan-1945-Photographs-ODonnell-2008-04-15/dp/B01MR0L91R
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