Letter To The Daily Herald April 11, 1954 In the life I lead at Lambaréné, I get so tired and I have so much work to do that I cannot keep up my correspondence as much as I should wish, nor can I find time to write on subjects about which my advice is asked. It is quite impossible for me to write an 800 word article for you. I am obliged to summon my last reserves of energy in order to carry out the essential work I must do each day. I cannot even take a normal night's sleep and it is almost midnight as I write these lines to you. Please excuse my delay in replying to you. I am, however, most anxious to give my views to you personally. The problem of the effects of H-bomb explosions is terribly disturbing, but I do not think that a conference of scientists is what is needed to deal with it. There are too many conferences in the world today and too many decisions taken by them. What the world should do is to listen to the warnings of individual scientists who understand this terrible problem. That is what would impress people and give them understanding and make them realize the danger in which we find ourselves. Just look at the influence Einstein has, because of the anguish he shows in face of the atomic bomb. It must be the scientists, who comprehend thoroughly all the issues and the dangers involved, who speak to the world, as many as possible of them all telling humanity the truth in speeches and articles. If they all raised their voices, each one feeling himself impelled to tell the terrible truth, they would be listened to, for then humanity would understand that the issues were grave. If you and Alexander Haddow [the professor who has pleaded for a United Nations conference of scientists on the H-bomb] can manage to persuade them to put before mankind the thoughts by which they themselves are obsessed, then there will be some hope of stopping these horrible explosions and of bringing pressure to bear on the men who govern. But the scientists must speak up. Only they have the authority to state that we can no longer take on ourselves the responsibility for these experiments, only they can say it. There you have my opinion. I give it to you with anguish in my heart, anguish which holds me from day to day. With my best wishes and in the hope that those who must advise us will make themselves heard.
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