Social Media Toolkit

Thank you for joining people around the world in sharing paper cranes between August 6 and 9 to mark 79 years since the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Together, we will create a powerful public display of support for a better future, one where nuclear weapons have no place. 

Please feel free to adapt and use any of the resources in this toolkit as you develop your message about why you’re sharing a paper crane this year. We hope you’ll encourage your community to bring their creativity, too, and join the chorus of voices participating in the campaign. 

Useful Links:

Navigation Menu

Scroll or use the links below to find sample content and graphics to post, a draft grassroots email to send to your contacts, and more. More assets will be added as the campaign gets closer. 

 

 

Digital Paper Crane Art

Participating can be as easy as sharing a photo of #CranesForOurFuture original art, created by Kyiv-based, Ukrainian paper artist Mariia Lapitan-Yashchenko.

When sharing, please credit artist Mariia Lapitan-Yashchenko (or tag her @wooow.paperart on Instagram and Mariia Lapitan-Yashchenko on Facebook).

Social Media Copy

For inspiration to answer the question of why you’re sharing a crane this year, use the copy below to share along with your picture, graphic, or video. Please use the hashtag #CranesForOurFuture or link back to the website where possible. 

Every August, people around the world honor the victims of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I’m sharing a paper crane to represent my hope for a world free of nuclear weapons.

CranesForOurFuture.org #CranesForOurFuture

Our future is on the ballot. I’m sharing a paper crane as a symbol of hope that we elect leaders who support humanity’s creative, not destructive, potential.

CranesForOurFuture.org #CranesForOurFuture

Diplomacy over destruction. Books not bombs. I’m sharing a paper crane to carry forward Sadako Sasaki’s legacy with a message of peace, hope, and resilience.

CranesForOurFuture.org #CranesForOurFuture

This August, I’m joining others to share #CranesForOurFuture and raise awareness of the growing nuclear arms race. We must stop it for the future of our people and our planet.

CranesForOurFuture.org #CranesForOurFuture

I’m folding a crane to honor Sadako Sasaki and all the children impacted by conflicts they didn’t create. Every child deserves to live free of the threat of nuclear weapons.

CranesForOurFuture.org #CranesForOurFuture

We’re one mistake, accident, or deliberate act away from nuclear catastrophe. It doesn’t have to be this way. I’m folding this crane to call on our leaders to pull us back from the brink and end the dangerous arms race.

CranesForOurFuture.org #CranesForOurFuture

I’m sharing a crane to honor the victims of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and every victim of nuclear weapons production and testing. I’m committed to building a future where humanity and hope prevail.

CranesForOurFuture.org #CranesForOurFuture

I’m sharing a crane because I know it is one of many #CranesForOurFuture. With each one, we demonstrate that support for a world without nuclear weapons is only growing.

CranesForOurFuture.org #CranesForOurFuture

Shareable Social Graphics

Simply download and copy and paste the graphics below into your post on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, or any other platform you prefer to share your vision for a future free of nuclear weapons and inspire your friends and family to participate.

Instagram Carousel

Graphics

GIFs

Campaign Videos

Show your network what #CranesForOurFuture is about. Download the videos to post natively to your social media or use the links below to share the videos posted on YouTube.

 

Selfie Printouts

Use this printable sign to share what a world without nuclear weapons means to you.

 

Print and color in your own crane to share on social media.

Send an Email

Share why you’re participating in #CranesForOurFuture and encourage your personal or organizational networks to join in. 

 


Alternate Subject lines:

  • Our future is on the ballot

  • Send a message about future you want August 6-9

Subject:  Join us August 6-9 for #CranesForOurFuture

Dear ______,

We’re facing the biggest risk of nuclear conflict since the Cold War, but for most people, nuclear weapons feel like an invisible threat, lurking unseen in the background of our everyday lives. But with a new nuclear arms race underway, we’re only one mistake or miscalculation away from a catastrophic disaster. 

It doesn’t need to be that way. We have an opportunity to show our leaders—those in office and those up for election—that we demand a better future for our families and communities, a safer future where nuclear weapons have no place.

Between August 6 and 9, the anniversaries of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, will you join others across the globe to send a message about why you’re folding a crane, with the hashtag #CranesForOurFuture? 

To learn how, go to: https://www.cranesforourfuture.org. The power of our voices can show our leaders that we demand a more peaceful future–not another arms race. 

Each year, #CranesForOurFuture brings together powerful voices from around the world–from world leaders like UN Secretary of General António Guterres to members of the U.S. Congress like Sen. Chris Van Hollen to artists and entertainment industry leaders like Julianne Moore, Yoko Ono, and Michael Douglas. It’s a movement that reminds us of hopeful possibilities and demands that our leaders forge a path to a brighter, safer future now. 

With your help this year, we can make it clear that support for a world without nuclear weapons is the consensus and that change is possible. 

Paper cranes are a symbol of peace around the world, thanks to the legacy of Sadako Sasaki. After she was diagnosed with radiation-induced leukemia a decade after the bombing in Hiroshima, she folded 1,000 paper cranes in the hopes that her wish to live would be granted. While Sadako did not survive, her legacy of paper cranes did, inspiring her classmates, and then the world, with a message of peace, hope, and resilience. 

By folding cranes as a symbol of peace and hope, we can share a powerful vision: the hope and promise of a more peaceful world free from the threat of nuclear war. 

Thanks,

[Your name here]