Vintage chemical attack survival posters

In 1938, the Japanese Red Cross worked with government authorities to create a series of posters to teach the public about the new Anti-Aircraft Defense Law, which was enacted in seeming anticipation of air strikes following the outbreak of the Japan-China War (1937-1945). Among other things, the law required citizens to take protective measures against gas attacks and prepare for disinfection, evacuation and relief. For the government, one purpose of the posters — which were created as part of a military exhibition at the Red Cross Museum — was to instill a pattern of “anti-aircraft defense thought” among the population.
The other day Mr. Nag and I were talking about the school bomb drills we had to participate in during the Cuban Missile Crisis. I still recall the fear induced by the air raid sirens. The Japanese population must have been terrified during this time.
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