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Japanese history textbook provokes sharp controversy
By James Conachy
7 June 2001
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The new Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi is provoking
a diplomatic rift with South Korea and China over a school history
textbook that sanitises and justifies the role of Japanese militarism
in Asia in the first half of the 20th century. The disputed text
has been approved for use in high schools next year and went on
sale this week in Japanese bookstores. It was authored by a rightwing
academic grouping, the History Textbook Reform Society.
South Korean historians have cited 25 passages or omissions
in the textbook that distort the history of Japan's occupation
of Korea from 1905 to 1945. Academics in China have highlighted
eight passages or omissions that distort the Japanese seizure
of Manchuria in 1931 and the invasion of China from 1937 to 1945.
The depth of feeling in these countries, extending to broad sections
of the population, stems from the fact that both were victims
of Japanese colonial rule.
The original content of the textbook was far more blatant in
its historical falsifications. When it was submitted for approval
to the Japanese Education Ministry, screeners insisted upon 137
factual revisions or supplements. Despite reported differences
within the ministry, the final version was authorised for use
in April.
The South Korean and Chinese governments have made official
diplomatic requests that the text be revised further before it
is allowed into school classrooms. Seoul has given the Koizumi
administration until August to act or it will consider reprisals.
It has already threatened to restore the total ban on the import
into South Korea of Japanese culturesuch as popular music
and filmthat was only lifted in 1998.
Koizumi, however, has bluntly dismissed the South Korean and
Chinese requests. On May 8, 12 days after being sworn in, he told
media it was unthinkable that his government would
interfere in textbook selection. On May 17, he reinforced this
position, telling a press conference: I know there are various
opinions, but we cannot revise it.
The administration, while declaring that the views of the Reform
Society are not shared by the government, is allowing the book
to be used in Japan's state-funded, secular schools on the grounds
it has passed through the necessary screening process. An Education
Ministry official, Toru Funahashi, stated on May 17: Since
we have strict screening, the approved textbooks do not contain
mistakes.
By taking this stance, Koizumi has aligned his government with
an organisation that openly defends the brutal rule of the Japanese
capitalist class at home and in the region in the first half of
the 20th century.
Justification for militarism
The Textbook Reform Society was formed in January 1997 and
claims to have 10,000 members, including several hundred politicians
and leading business figures. Its main criticism of existing textbooks
is that even their limited and grudging references to some of
the atrocities committed by Japanese militarism are a perverse,
masochistic view.
The Society's website declares: After its defeat in World
War II Japan was occupied by US troops. To render it incapable
of attacking them a second time, the Americans forced Japan to
reorganise all of its institutions, even its constitution. Not
content to stop there, they attempted to alter the Japanese perception
of history. They expunged Japan's history, injecting in its place
a history fabricated by the victors. Japan became the source of
all evils in accounts of wars subsequent to the Manchurian Incident
(1931).
Running throughout the Society's version of history is a reassertion
of the Japanese militarist claim that its actions in the 1930s
and 1940s were acts of self-defence against the Western powers
and wars of liberation that benefited the Asian people. The rightwing
in Japan is able to point to the undeniable role of European and
US colonialism in exploiting the Asian masses, and of the US,
in particular, in helping to provoke the Pacific War.
The European powers subjected Asia to colonial rule and economic
plunder for centuries. At the end of the 19th century the Indian
subcontinent, Burma, Singapore and the Malay Peninsula were held
by Britain. The Dutch had ruled Indonesia (the Dutch East Indies)
for over 300 years. France exerted colonial rule over Indochina.
Spain held the Philippines. Throughout the 19th century China
was forced by interventions and wars to grant the colonial powers
a series of humiliating economic and territorial concessions.
Having barely avoided colonisation itself, Japan was hemmed
in by the preceding division of the region. Like the US, which
seized Cuba and the Philippines from Spain in 1900, Japan sought
to overcome this by an aggressive militarist policy of its own.
From 1894 it conducted a succession of annexations, interventions
and wars, firstly against China and then Russia. In the 1920s
and 1930s, it came into conflict with a far more powerful contender
for hegemony, the United States.
Stripped of its ideological masks, the Pacific War between
the US and Japan was a struggle between two predatory states seeking
to replace the previously dominant European powers in the region
and in China in particular. Being the weaker power, Japan was
compelled to resort to adventurist methodsthe invasion of
Manchuria in 1931, then China as a whole in 1937. For its part,
the US, while claiming to stand for democracy, had no qualms about
firebombing Japanese cities and dropping atomic bombs on Hiroshima
and Nagasaki to ensure the complete submission of its rival.
The objective of the Textbook Reform Society, however, is not
to expose the role of imperialism in Asia but to replace one set
of historical distortions with another. Like all nationalist apologists,
the group seeks to justify the crimes of one imperialist powerin
this case Japanby pointing the finger at those of its rivalsEurope
and the US.
The Society's book, for instance, declares that the 1904-1905
Russian-Japanese War, fought for control of the Korean peninsula
and China's Manchurian region [w]as a momentous war that
brought victory to a non-white race of people... The victory inspired
tremendous hopes of independence among the oppressed nations around
the world.
The text also lauds the economic development of Korea and Manchuria
under Japanese rule. It asserts that the World War II conquest
of much of South East Asia by Japanese troops helped the
Asian peoples to cultivate the ideal and dream of independence.
What it fails to mention, however, is that for Korea, Formosa
(Taiwan) and Manchuria, Japanese rule meant decades of brutal
suppression. Under an assimilation policy, the Korean
and Chinese languages and names were proscribed and the population
compelled to swear loyalty to the Emperor and worship in Shinto
shrines. During World War II, hundreds of thousands of Korean
and Chinese men were conscripted for forced military service or
to work as semi-slaves in Japanese industry. As many as 100,000
Korean women, as well as tens of thousands of Chinese women, were
transported to military brothels to function as sex slaves or
comfort women.
The Japanese invasion of China from 1937 was marked by particular
barbarity. At least 10 million Chinese civilians and 1.3 million
soldiers were killed from 1937 to 1945. The textbook initially
omitted any reference at all to the notorious Nanjing massacre
in 1937 when, in an attempt to intimidate the Chinese people,
Japanese troops were ordered to murder the city's population.
Over 200,000 surrendered Chinese soldiers and civilians were butchered.
The denial or understatement of what took place in Nanjing
is a trademark of the extreme rightwing in Japan much like the
denial of the Holocaust is for fascistic sympathisers of the Nazi
regime in Germany. The Reform Society only reluctantly included
a reference to Nanjing in the final version of the textbook on
the orders of the Japanese Education Ministry, but qualified it
by saying it was the subject of debate.
Imperialist revival
The positions of the Textbook Reform Society reflect the long-held
views of significant sections of the Japanese ruling elite and
especially in the leadership of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP),
which held power for most of the postwar period. While forced
to curb any open defence of Japan's wartime regime, Japan's political
leaders only ever made the most begrudging admissions of the prewar
and wartime crimes. Koreans only received a token verbal apology
from the Japanese government in 1995.
The open defence of Japan's militarist past is connected to
the dilemmas confronting the Japanese ruling classthe necessity
of radically restructuring its stagnant economy, of dealing with
the opposition such policies will inevitably engender, and of
adopting a far more assertive foreign policy, including reviving
Japan as a military power.
Under these conditions, figures like Tokyo governor Shintaro
Ishihara have consciously sought to whip up sentiment that blames
Japan's present misfortunes on its treatment by the US following
the war and its lack of a strong military. In doing so, Ishihara
has received high-level media and business support.
The inculcation of patriotism in the schools is being pushed
aggressively by the media. Since 1997 the Fuji-Sankei Communications
empire, the owner of Japan's largest television and radio stations
and fifth largest newspaper, Sankei Shimbun, has provided
editorial space and support for the Textbook Reform Society. The
textbook was printed and is being distributed by Fuso, a major
publishing house owned by Fuji-Sankei.
The LDP responded to the campaign in 1999 by making the singing
of the national anthem and raising the Rising Sun flagsymbols
of wartime militarismcompulsory in schools. Other textbooks
are also being modified. This year, four out of the seven other
history texts in Japan cut out their previous references to the
fate of comfort women during World War II.
This campaign has now been given an extra boost by the new
Koizumi administration, which is seeking to establish a social
base for its economic policies by nationalist appeals.
Koizumi is calling for the revision of the postwar pacifist
constitution to remove Article 9, a clause inserted by the US
prohibiting Japan from maintaining armed forces and deploying
them overseas. Constitutional change is being justified on the
grounds that Japan, as the second largest economy in the world,
must be able to assist the US and other major powers militarily
in maintaining regional stability.
Koizumi has also provoked controversy by announcing his intention
to worship at the Yasukuni Shrine to Japan's war dead in an official
capacity on August 15the anniversary of Japan's surrender
in World War II. Wartime leader and convicted war criminal Hideki
Tojo, as well as five other hanged war criminals, are buried in
the shrine. Japanese politicians have shunned official worship
due to the perception in both Japan and Asia that it amounts to
commemorating the wartime regime.
A definite logic is contained in the various efforts to legitimise
and resurrect the history and symbols of Japanese militarism.
It amounts to clearing the ideological decks for an aggressive
reassertion of the interests of Japanese imperialism in Asia and
elsewhere against those of its rivals.
See Also:
Koizumi's agenda for Japan:
economic austerity and rightwing nationalism
[22 May 2001]
Tokyo governor uses
earthquake drill to push rightwing, militarist agenda
[18 September 2000]
Mori's 'gaffes' point
to a revival of right-wing Japanese nationalism
[13 June 2000]
Obuchi raises the banner
of Japanese nationalism
[2 August 1999]
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