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Japan renames holiday to honour wartime Emperor Hirohito
By John Chan
21 May 2005
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On May 13, the Japanese parliament passed a bill to rename
a national holiday in honour of the late Emperor Hirohito, in
whose name Japanese imperialism carried out a brutal campaign
of colonial expansion and militarism from 1931 to 1945.
By an overwhelming vote of 202 to 14 in the upper house of
parliament, the national holiday on April 29Hirohitos
birthdaywill change from Greenery Day to Showa Day in 2007.
The main opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) and the New
Komeito Party supported the decision by the Liberal Democratic
Party (LDP) government of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, while
the Stalinist Japanese Communist Party (JCP) and the Social Democratic
Party (SDP) opposed it.
Until 1945, April 29 was called Tenchosetsuthe
day to pray for the long life of the emperor. Hirohitos
birthday only continued to be observed following the World War
due to the actions of US imperialism. As part of the measures
to revive Japanese capitalism, the American occupation authority
exempted Hirohito from charges of war crimes and left the emperor
in place as the symbolic head of state.
Following Hirohitos death in 1989, April 29 was established
as a national holiday, but was called Greenery Day ostensibly
due to the emperors interests in biology. Greenery Day,
implying a holiday celebrating nature, was proposed in opposition
to a right-wing nationalist campaign, which insisted on Showa,
the title given to the period of Hirohitos reign from 1926.
While the word Showa means enlightened peace, for
the Japanese working class and the people of Asia there was nothing
enlightened or peaceful about the first two decades of Hirohitos
reign. They produced dictatorship, colonial invasions, unspeakable
atrocities and the horrors of World War II.
Attempts in 2001 and 2003 to rename April 29 as Showa Day were
defeated, primarily by the votes of JCP and SDP legislators in
the upper house of parliament. These two social reformist parties
are thoroughly discredited, however, and suffered a debacle in
last years elections. With Democratic Party support, Koizumi
has now been able to push through the change.
The official commemoration of Hirohitos reign is another
attempt by Koizumi to promote Japanese nationalism and glorify
its militarist past. Just last month, amid the anti-Japanese protests
in China and South Korea, Tokyo deliberately approved school history
textbooks authored by the right-wing Japanese Society for History
Textbook Reform, which whitewash the wartime atrocities of Japanese
military.
Seiji Mataichi, a SDP lawmaker who opposed the bill, told reporters:
The ruling Liberal Democratic Party wants to promote nationalism
through this. Why, in this year, the 60th anniversary of the end
of the war, do we have to create a Showa Day? This is inviting
opposition from neighbouring countries such as China and South
Korea.
Since Koizumi came to power in April 2001, both he and members
of his government have provoked tensions with Japans neighbours
by worshipping at the Yasukuni Shrine where convicted war criminals
are buried, including the wartime Japanese prime minister Hideki
Tojo.
Other symbols of imperial Japan are being revived and patriotism
pushed in the schools. Despite considerable opposition, the right-wing
nationalist Tokyo governor, Shintaro Ishihara, has forced teachers
and students in the Japanese capital to stand for the raising
of the national flag and the singing of the national anthem. In
violation of basic democratic rights, Ishihara disciplined 180
teachers in the citys high schools last year who refused
to do so. Ishihara is a long-time proponent of Japanese remilitarisation
and maintains that Japans expansionism in World War II sought
to liberate Asia from European colonial rule.
The promotion of nationalism and efforts to rehabilitate Japans
wartime past have accompanied Koizumis strategy of using
the Bush administrations war on terror to assert
a more aggressive international posture by Japanese imperialism.
Koizumis government sent warships to support the US military
operation against Afghanistan, and has deployed troops to take
part in the US-led occupation of Iraqthe first time since
the end of World War II that Japanese troops have entered a war
zone. The DPJ and the LDPs coalition partner, New Komeito,
supported these measures.
New Komeitos support for Koizumis agenda has been
a particularly revealing indication of the political shift within
the Japanese ruling class. The party previously formally denounced
militarism and opposed commemoration of the wartime era. It derives
much of its support from Japanese Buddhists, who were suppressed
under the wartime regime.
The opposition Democratic Party has also shifted to support
militarism. In its statement supporting Koizumis recent
order to extend the deployment of Japanese troops in Iraq, for
example, the DPJ declared: The DPJ has maintained its attitude
that anti-terrorism measures are important and that use of Self-Defence
Forces (SDF) is an option if truly necessary as long as civilian
control by the Diet is absolutely maintained.
The view in Japanese ruling circles that military power is
now a necessary foreign policy instrument stems from the intractable
economic crisis of Japanese capitalism and the conflicts with
other powers for markets and sources of raw materials. Japans
economy has stagnated for close to 15 years, and inequality and
social divisions are accumulating within the country.
Tensions between Japan and its neighbours are already high.
The South Korean government has publicly declared its opposition
to Japans bid for a permanent seat on the UN Security Council.
Sino-Japanese rivalries are even more acute, with territorial
disputes over control of potential oil and gas fields in the East
China Sea. The conflicts extend further afield as well. Last month,
Koizumi visited India immediately after Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao
left. In order to undercut Chinas overtures to New Delhi,
Koizumi promised increased investment.
There are parallels in the present situation with the processes
that took place during the 1930s. As the weakest among the major
imperialist states, the Japanese bourgeoisie increasingly turned
to militarism abroad and ruthless political repression at home,
in order to secure its interests. Intense nationalist ideology
was employed to tie the Japanese masses to the ruling class as
they embarked on a series of colonial conquests and eventually
war with their main rival, the United States.
Bitter memories of Japanese militarism still exist in the region.
The Korean peninsula and the areas of China occupied by the Japanese
military were transformed into exclusive business zones, with
their resources and markets set aside for exploitation by Japanese
corporations. Millions of Chinese, Koreans and others were forced
to work as slave labour in mines and factories owned by companies
like Mitsubishi. Tens of thousands died due to the brutal conditions.
In all, as many as 15 million Chinese lost their lives under Japanese
imperialist rule.
The Japanese government is still operating disposal plants
in China to eliminate the estimated 700,000 chemical weapons the
Japanese Army abandoned in the country. Last year, two children
in north-eastern Jilin province were injured by leftover poisonous
gas. Some 2,000 Chinese have been killed by these chemical agents
since the war.
To honour the emperor in whose name this was carried out smacks
of another calculated provocation by Koizumi, aimed at generating
conflict with South Korea and China and using it to whip up nationalist
sentiment at home. Despite the protests from Seoul and Beijing,
Koizumi declared again on Monday that he would also continue his
visits to the Yasukuni Shrine: I will decide appropriately
when to go. Other countries should not interfere with ways countries
pay tribute to the war dead.
See Also:
Behind China-Japan tensions
Washington fuels Japanese militarism
Part One
[25 April 2005]
US-Japan security statement
heightens tensions with China
[1 March 2005]
Japan outbids China for Siberian
pipeline
[14 February 2005]
Japan uses submarine
incident to whip up anti-Chinese nationalism
[29 November 2004]
Koizumi's visit to
the Yasukuni shrine legitimises Japanese militarism
[17 August 2001]
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