“Now I am become death, the destroyer of worlds”: Expert Confirms Iconic Oppenheimer Line is Wildly Incorrect – He Never Used it!

Expert Confirms Iconic Oppenheimer Line is Wildly Incorrect - He Never Used it!
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The Trinity Test leading into the execution of the controversial Manhattan Project by J Robert Oppenheimer can now be witnessed globally on the bigger screens, thanks to Christopher Nolan’s initiative.

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In a race against Nazi Germany during World War II, the American government, in hopes to be many steps ahead of the enemy, wanted to devise a way to put an end to the war. 

Scientists at the time were against a catastrophic weapon, but Oppenheimer was alarmed by the news that the Germans could be developing nuclear weaponry and that the Japanese had sided with the Nazis. 

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Cillian Murphy as J Robert Oppenheimer
Cillian Murphy as J Robert Oppenheimer

Although the American soldiers were not involved directly in the war in the European subcontinent but helped their ally nations – France and England to push back the enemy. It was the attack on America’s Pearl Harbour that they pushed the red button.

Read more: Concerning News For Cillian Murphy Fans as ‘Oppenheimer’ Might Get Banned

Oppenheimer Realized He Became The Destroyer Of Worlds

The Little Boy and Fat Man, dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki after the war had already ended with the Germans on the subcontinent, brought the Japanese to their knees.

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His famous quote, “Now I am become death, the destroyer of worlds,” inspired by the mythological Indian book – Gita has been doing the rounds since the first trailer of Oppenheimer was released online.

J Robert Oppenheimer
J Robert Oppenheimer

Now, an Indian author has alleged that Oppenheimer never said these lines.

Devdutt Pattanaik, 52, said in a recent interview, that these lines have been interpreted wrongly. 

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“I did some research on Oppenheimer, and I had never heard this line. It was chapter 11, verse 32, which really says ‘kaal-asmi,’ which means ‘I am time, destroyer of the world.’ So, his translation itself is wrong. It is time, time is the destroyer of the world,” he said.

He further adds that the chaos and destruction witnessed by the tests shook the world, and also the creator, suggesting that he most likely saw it coming.

Read more: “I cracked the script”: Christopher Nolan Claims His Unmade Movie With Jim Carrey Helped Making Oppenheimer Easily

Being An American, How Did Oppenheimer Know These Lines?

The scientists in that era were extremely capable in their ways and left behind some of the greatest inventions and theories with the power to either create a future or end it.

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While the world was witnessing an intense global war in the early ‘40s, people often wonder how did Oppenheimer make time to quote a Hindu religious line.

Oppenheimer
Oppenheimer

Pattanaik, in his interview, cleared that the father of the atomic bomb must have been looking for some spiritual way to deal with the violence and destruction, and he may have had an Indian in his team who probably suggested he find solace in the religious book.

Suggested: Christopher Nolan Confirms Oppenheimer, a Movie About the Making of the First Atomic Bomb, Has no CGI Shots

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The film, released on July 21, is ready in all its atomic glory to show us his ethical dilemma, and while we don’t want to spoil if there are any Indian connections, it is advised that the readers book their tickets and check it out for themselves.

Source: Vanity Fair

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Written by Ojaswi Chaudhary

Articles Published: 265

Extremely passionate about a great story since the little guy was 8. He has lived through nothing short of almost 300 of Hollywood's finest pieces of work, and is now creating some of his own here at FandomWire. He loves to make time for a good book and a good meal.