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  1. Mr. Sasaki leaves work and takes Sadako to the Red Cross Hospital. As they enter the building, Sadako is full of fear—there is a wing of the hospital, she knows, devoted entirely to patients sick with the atom bomb illness. A nurse x-rays Sadako’s chest and takes her blood. A doctor named Dr. Numata comes into the room and asks Sadako a lot ...

  2. History, Family, and Tradition Quotes in Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes. Below you will find the important quotes in Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes related to the theme of History, Family, and Tradition. Chapter 1 Quotes. Rushing like a whirlwind into the kitchen, Sadako cried, “Oh, Mother! I can hardly wait to go to the carnival.

  3. Sadako runs to her best friend Chizuko’s house—the two of them have been “close as two pine needles on the same twig” since kindergarten. Sadako chides Chizuko for being a “turtle” and moving slowly, and the two of them take off. Mrs. Sasaki calls after the two of them, warning them not to go to quickly and get overheated. Mrs.

  4. Day 8 Chapter 8 transfusions ----- ----- Theme Figurative Language Response Cards Day 9 Chapter 9 Epilogue concentrate Practice Booklet Page 7 Chapters 7 ... Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes ~ Chapters 1-3 1. Which three phrases best summarize Chapters 1-3? a. blue skies, spiders, white doves

  5. Near the end of July, Sadako feels her health is improving. She attributes this to the fact that she is "over halfway to one thousand cranes." Her appetite returns and much of her pain disappears. The doctors agree that she has improved enough to leave the hospital for a short visit home. "To keep the magic working" she folds more cranes ...

  6. Chizuko folds a golden crane for Sadako and teaches her how to make her own, and soon Sadako—with the help of her family, nurses, and doctors—is well on her way to her goal of folding a thousand cranes. The cranes are the central symbol of the novel and represent the book’s themes and motifs of hope, perseverance, and the acceptance of death.

  7. All of Sadako’s friends and family start saving paper for her to use to make the good luck origami cranes. Chizuko brings Sadako paper from school, her father saves every scrap he can from his barbershop, and Nurse Yasunaga gives Sadako wrappers from packages of medicine. Masahiro hangs every one of Sadako’s birds from the ceiling for her.