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  • A Soul Remembers Hiroshima

  • Written by: Dolores Cannon
  • Narrated by: Valerie Gilbert
  • Length: 6 hrs and 26 mins
  • 4.4 out of 5 stars (9 ratings)

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A Soul Remembers Hiroshima

Written by: Dolores Cannon
Narrated by: Valerie Gilbert
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Publisher's Summary

The persistent memory of a horrible death, that reached across time and space, and caused a 22-year-old American girl to seek past-life therapy, revealed the dramatic story of a Japanese man who was killed in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. There have been many stories of pain, death, and destruction told by survivors of the Hiroshima bombing. This is the eyewitness account of one who did not survive!

This case revealed startling information about the Japanese side of the war. Research into the bombing also revealed terrible truths that the public was not aware of at the time of this dramatic ending of World War II.

©1993 Dolores Cannon (P)2019 Dolores Cannon

What listeners say about A Soul Remembers Hiroshima

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  • Ali
  • 2021-01-12

Interesting but very depressing

Be prepared for horror. I thought there would be more but just one dose was enough for me.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Great book

I have listened to many of Dolores' books. I passed by this one many times because I didn't think I would enjoy it as much as some of her others. But it turns out it is my favourite!

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    5 out of 5 stars
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A moving look into a souls remembering

Who hasn't heard of the bombing of Hiroshima. But to relive it through the eyes of this gentle, very insightful Japanese man was deeply moving

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    5 out of 5 stars
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A Compelling Book

This is the second book of the author I've listened. The performer has a nice voice and she can switch between different roles to bring the listeners into the particular settings.

This is also a book of heart-breaking personal yet common stories to show volnerable a reincarnated soul can be living in different bodies at different times and regions. The old man whose family was completely destroyed by an atomic bomb, his story should alert today's people that our short lived peace and security may also be fragile if the governments and Power-Hunger people drag the world into chaos again.

I wish everyone even the most skeptics can read this book. Try to keep an open mind, stop questioning its authenticity, least you could regard it as an alerting fiction.

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    3 out of 5 stars
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Unremarkable

This is not a believable account of a past life experience. It is actually the writings of just another Tree Hugger. Looking at content, the writer related everything in American terms and American English. If the subject was truly regressed to a Japanese male born in the late 1800s, that person would not have known a word of English yet speaks perfect English and uses Imperial units of measurement. For example, distance is expressed in miles. The Japanese did not use that measurement in that era so a simple farmer would not even know this measurement. Of more significance is the fact that a simple farmer in that era would have no political insight yet this "farmer" has very good insight into the decisions of a government that was far removed from his location, even to the extent that " a General started the war". How would a simple farmer have insight to this?
This is a book written from a non existent source by an American activist and recounts facts any researcher has access to. This is exactly what I hear in the writings. The facts are repeats of accounts already on record not some eyewitness recollection of a personwho died as a result of the Atomic bomb in 1945.
A true researcher into past life experience would focus on the person and not the events of the era. in none of the supposedly past life's did the author make any attempt to verify the existence of the person, she just expressed an opinion of how she felt about a nuclear holocaust which was always in the background in the latter half of the 20th century.
Isn't it wonderful that actual details of this person's information is protected by the author so none of her written facts can be verified as being correct.

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