In Japan tradition, it was believed that if one folded 1,000 origami cranes, one's wish would come true. It has also become a symbol of hope and healing during challenging times. As a result, it has become popular to fold 1.000 cranes (in Japanese, called “senbazuru”)
@@Scamper-nq3jxnot sad, moreso interesting, I learned about it from that game too, and it’s a rather intriguing tradition. “whomever has the patience to fold 1,000 origami cranes will have any one wish granted.” It’s a rather interesting idea to me personally
A simular true story a thousand paper cranes is about a girl who got cancer from the radiation of a bomb. To pass the time she made paper cranes in the hospital. She never finished them because she died but her friends and family finished her goal of one thousand cranes. They where even put to rest with the girl.
I read that book in fifth grade and for a project I made an alternate ending where she survived and the cranes brought her and a friend, she had made in the hospital who dies before she did, back to life and they live together
Sadako and the thousand paper cranes. She didn’t get to one thousand though 😢, she died before that happened. Her classmates finished the work and buried her with them. Her first paper crane was a golden one gifted by her best friend. My teacher lent me that book when I learned how to fold paper cranes.
Is this like a version of Sadako Sasaski? Or I believe she is also called the girl with 1000 paper cranes. Basically she obtained leukemia from the bombing of Hiroshima and believed that if she folded 1000 paper cranes would heal her because there was a golden paper crane above the door way of her child hood home. When she unfortunately passed the kids in her class gathered money to make a memorial for her and it’s still in Japan today also you can send paper cranes to it
I remember a similar story from childhood. In elementary school the teacher read a story to us about the thousand paper cranes. And how this girl wished for acceptance in her school or something like that (I was like 6, cut me some slack 😂) And how if you make a thousand paper cranes you get to make a single wish, anything you want. I’m not superstitious but I enjoy the hope it gives and idk, it’s nice to think that when you put such great effort into something the universe rewards your efforts with the thing you’ve desired.
My japanese teacher told us a story of how she did this as a child for her sick grandma and hung it in the hospital she was at, it’s still there to this day.
This is about scarlet fever back before there was proper treatment for it. It was "you either live or die" kinda condition and most died. All people could do, as shown, was palative at home care and pray your loved ones lived.
This reminds me of a story I read So it is about a girl who one day found out she had a illness and was not going to make it and she was Japanese so she believed that if you fold a 1000 paper cranes she could wish to be healed Scroll down for spoil at the end of the book so you don't have to read it but if you want the book it is called the 1000 paper cranes In the end she was almost done with the paper cranes but sadly before she finished, she had died.
Actually there was a much similar story about a girl named Sadako. It’s called “Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes.” The story takes place after the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and tells of the aftermath of how many Japanese citizens died of leukemia due to the radiation.
I read this in a commonlit I was supposed to do!! If a person folds 1,000 cranes, they can make any wish to the gods. They folded 1000 so she could stay alive. The book I read though was the same thing but the girl wanted to survive the atomic bomb… Hope it helps!
WEONG STORY!!! She actually made 1000 paper cranes in order for her to make a wish to cure her sister from her illness. Not to make her happy but still the story is still sad.
If any of you know the game paper Mario the origami king then you might know how the villain king olly folded 1000 paper cranes so it’s a popular concept
I watched this short flim called "A folded wish" quite a long time ago but didn't quite understand the story well though I watched multiple times. But now after knowing, it's a story with very deep meaning.....
There was a true story about a little Japanese kid that got diagnosed with blood cancer (can’t remember the name of it) most likely from the bombings They had tried to fold one thousand cranes and never reached the end So after her passing people folded the rest of the thousand cranes (And I’m not entirely sure but I think it’s something that happens yearly now out of memorial for those who lost their lives to blood cancer in Japan?)
In Japan tradition, it was believed that if one folded 1,000 origami cranes, one's wish would come true. It has also become a symbol of hope and healing during challenging times. As a result, it has become popular to fold 1.000 cranes (in Japanese, called “senbazuru”)
Is it sad I learned about this tradition through paper mario: origami king?
@@Scamper-nq3jxnot sad, moreso interesting, I learned about it from that game too, and it’s a rather intriguing tradition. “whomever has the patience to fold 1,000 origami cranes will have any one wish granted.” It’s a rather interesting idea to me personally
alr uh off-topic but A FELLOW JAY FAN
@@tugsmunkhsengee6743 Jay is my childhood
I love the pfp of jay
Movie name: a folded wish
Short film on RUclips
Hope this helps 😊
👇🏾
yh it helped a lot thx
thank you:)
Pin this man
Thank you❤
Tysm!!😊
Why didn't you just say to get rid of all of it to the point where none of them had it 😭
Because of balance, the girl is smart and knows nothing can be done without payment/ consequences.
Because the illness would have to go somewhere. Things don’t just go away.
@@ashebennett7726 dang transfer it to a potted plant! 😢
FR
@@priscillajimenez27lol
A simular true story a thousand paper cranes is about a girl who got cancer from the radiation of a bomb. To pass the time she made paper cranes in the hospital. She never finished them because she died but her friends and family finished her goal of one thousand cranes. They where even put to rest with the girl.
Sudako ye i was about to comment that
I read that in Japanese class and It devastated me
I read that book in fifth grade and for a project I made an alternate ending where she survived and the cranes brought her and a friend, she had made in the hospital who dies before she did, back to life and they live together
Sadako and the thousand paper cranes. She didn’t get to one thousand though 😢, she died before that happened. Her classmates finished the work and buried her with them. Her first paper crane was a golden one gifted by her best friend. My teacher lent me that book when I learned how to fold paper cranes.
It's sadako sasaki , a book written by her brother , there's even a memorial where people often get paper cranes to her
Is this like a version of Sadako Sasaski? Or I believe she is also called the girl with 1000 paper cranes. Basically she obtained leukemia from the bombing of Hiroshima and believed that if she folded 1000 paper cranes would heal her because there was a golden paper crane above the door way of her child hood home. When she unfortunately passed the kids in her class gathered money to make a memorial for her and it’s still in Japan today also you can send paper cranes to it
This reminds me of the book Sadako and the thousand paper cranes.
I have that book 😢
I remember that, it's really sad as even her childhood friend died of it too
that is what the film is based on, and fun fact the book is based on a real girl
It’s so sad
Its so sad it also reminds me of that also 😢❤
When you realize she could've just wished for her sister to not have cancer instead 💀
You can't wish for something without a return
@@grimreaper5309that’s correct,there’d be a price to pay
You can never appreciate something,unless you loose it...
Wdym she did appreciate her sister.
she loved her sister,tf?
😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢🤧🤧🤧😖😖🤒🤒🤒😷😷😷😫😫😩☹️☹️☹️😭😭😭
I remember a similar story from childhood. In elementary school the teacher read a story to us about the thousand paper cranes. And how this girl wished for acceptance in her school or something like that (I was like 6, cut me some slack 😂) And how if you make a thousand paper cranes you get to make a single wish, anything you want. I’m not superstitious but I enjoy the hope it gives and idk, it’s nice to think that when you put such great effort into something the universe rewards your efforts with the thing you’ve desired.
Sadako?
I see this when I was watching a video this video make me cry and my cousin wants to not to cry but he just look sad 😅
My japanese teacher told us a story of how she did this as a child for her sick grandma and hung it in the hospital she was at, it’s still there to this day.
I cried, this video made me so sad.
I honestly hope nobody goes through this, even though it’s not posible I hope everybody is doing okay😞.
The way her last crane tore up in half, because her sister's wish got granted first being able to finish the 1000 cranes first 😢
Reminds me of sadako
We watched this in class and dam lots of kids just laughed bro😭
NAHHH 😭😭
I think it’s a better idea to have a doctor check out the illness 👨🏾⚕️🧑🏽⚕️🧑🏽⚕️🥼🩻🩺
This is about scarlet fever back before there was proper treatment for it. It was "you either live or die" kinda condition and most died. All people could do, as shown, was palative at home care and pray your loved ones lived.
This reminds me of a story I read
So it is about a girl who one day found out she had a illness and was not going to make it and she was Japanese so she believed that if you fold a 1000 paper cranes she could wish to be healed
Scroll down for spoil at the end of the book so you don't have to read it but if you want the book it is called the 1000 paper cranes
In the end she was almost done with the paper cranes but sadly before she finished, she had died.
It reminds me of Sadako sadly she did not survive her cancer
I never usually cry while watching sad things but I did for this vid. Something just is sad. So sad it made me cry
Omg this is the story I was looking for I think of it every time I make a crane
I watched this in my ELA class and the grade below me laughed at it. I almost cried 😭
This shows how caring the sister is and that her wish was the sweetest and most loving gift she ever wanted. Such a loving sister 🩷
I remember watching this in 2021 man..
This all could’ve been avoided if they just went to the hospital instead of using grandma’s off brand NyQuil 💀
Or wish the disease away, but sad story nonetheless
Actually there was a much similar story about a girl named Sadako. It’s called “Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes.” The story takes place after the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and tells of the aftermath of how many Japanese citizens died of leukemia due to the radiation.
OMG SOOO SAD 😭😭
This is cute and sad at the same time 😍😭😭😭
I remembered crying when i watched this with my classmates
I CRIED when I watched this the first time the sound of the girl crying is so real and sad 😭😭😭😭
I remember watching this when I was younger
I learned about this in soldier studies. There are so many sad stories about the 1000 cranes.😢😢😢
I remember a book that was just like that, I read it last year and it was very sad but I’d also loved it.
I hv a twin i just cant imagine it...
Those who almost cried
👇👇👇
I used to watch this video a few years ago it made me cry everytime
I still remember this video ever since 2018
The 1000 crane part reminds me of a CERTAIN Nintendo game
I read this in a commonlit I was supposed to do!!
If a person folds 1,000 cranes, they can make any wish to the gods. They folded 1000 so she could stay alive.
The book I read though was the same thing but the girl wanted to survive the atomic bomb…
Hope it helps!
WEONG STORY!!!
She actually made 1000 paper cranes in order for her to make a wish to cure her sister from her illness. Not to make her happy but still the story is still sad.
DAMN,THIS TOO SAD THAT I'VE BEEN WATCHING IT FOR 3 TIMES😢
I watched this video long time ago I was trying to find it and it made me cry this is astounding
I have seen this a thousand times it’ll never not be sad
it’s like sadako & 1000 paper cranes
I watched it a few years ago and I cried😢😢😢
Kinda like SADOKO
😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭☠
God bless
This video almost made me cry
That's when you uppercut death with that uno reverse card
If any of you know the game paper Mario the origami king then you might know how the villain king olly folded 1000 paper cranes so it’s a popular concept
I watched this as a fourth grader, and they had tuberculosis and it made me cry
I watched this short flim called "A folded wish" quite a long time ago but didn't quite understand the story well though I watched multiple times.
But now after knowing, it's a story with very deep meaning.....
That's funny. That reminds of a certain game about a certain paper plumber.
Bro i watched this short film before and this broke my heart😢 the pink girl died from sickness😢 i literally cried after watching that.
Cute video but the fast wording at the end
“She hugged the box and cried.” 💀
This reminds me of sadakos story, such a sad story ❤❤
I have watched it now three times and in all those three times I cryed
Losing a sister to cancer is the hardest thing to do 😢
So beautiful ❤😢
I remember this short film😭
THIS REMINDS ME OF SADAKO SASAKI! 😭😭😭
Trends change faster than a girl changing her outfit
Omg I remember watching this in school, it was so sad
My anxiety while watching this: 📈📈📈📈📈
I feel like if i have that wish i would wish for the girl to have no cancer
Also theres a book called sadako and the thousand paper cranes its based off of a statue for sadako sasaki with paper cranes and history
When I saw this video the original one I was so sad I couldn’t stop thinking about it
So basically paper, Mario, the origami king
I don’t know why but I’m literally crying😢
Bloody hell am now crying because of 1000 cranes 😢😢😢😢😢I love
I watched this in class once😭
I remember watching this
Itsnot about cancer. Its about the Tuberculosis epidemic that went through Japan.
I watched this a few year ago I don’t remember and I cried it was amazing but mainly sad😭😭😭😭😭❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
"We played together in the house" or "They played together in the house"?
I've seen this one! Still very sad though😢
There was a true story about a little Japanese kid that got diagnosed with blood cancer (can’t remember the name of it) most likely from the bombings
They had tried to fold one thousand cranes and never reached the end
So after her passing people folded the rest of the thousand cranes
(And I’m not entirely sure but I think it’s something that happens yearly now out of memorial for those who lost their lives to blood cancer in Japan?)
Me:Oh no, that's a really sad story, but it also reminds me of a book-
Saddako and the 1,000 paper cranes:Allow me to introduce myself.
I, m crying now😢
Man this is cute and sad!😢
❌️ wishing the cancer to begone
✅️ wishing to transfer the cancer
there was a myth that if you fold 1000 paper cranes (origami) you make a wish the first one was Sadako Sasaki
I ever watch that with my friends
Her name isnt lucy its Ming Ping
My art teacher showed my class this
The family of the irradiated man made hundreds of cranes and theu are still hing up in the hospital room that he died in
I saw that story in school
It was actually TB not cancer, which is highly contagious, unlike cancer, which is not contagious
Ik my siblings are annoying af but I can't imagine loosing one of them
Bro all she had to do was get rid of it for everyone not give it to herself I think she has a death wish💀
Awww!!!
It keeps changing from "her" to "my"..
Great
I cried😭
This is a Japanese label from WW2 after the bomb in Hiroshima
This was a little girl named saeko because she got luekima so she tried to fold 1000 cranes but to like 686.
That's the sister love😢
... Anyone else thought they were gonna play hot potato with the cancer
She wished to get her cancer back.❤😢
I only know this because of Sadako