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Thread: Military 'forced' Okinawa mass suicides

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    DefaultMilitary 'forced' Okinawa mass suicides

    Military 'forced' Okinawa mass suicides | The Japan Times Online

    Expert defies ministry to go public with criticism of textbook revisions
    Kyodo News

    Researchers of the 1945 Battle of Okinawa agree that the Imperial army "forced and steered" civilians to commit mass suicide during the only full-scale ground battle in Japan during World War II, an authority on modern Japanese history said Tuesday.

    Hirofumi Hayashi, a professor at Kanto Gakuin University in Yokohama, said he conveyed the view in a statement handed to the government's textbook-screening panel, which is considering requests by publishers to reinstate references about the military's role in forcing civilians to commit suicide, in some cases involving children, invalids and the elderly.

    Hayashi said he responded to a request from the Textbook Authorization Council, which advises the education minister, and had asked a number of researchers on the battle to file their opinions.

    Opinions from researchers, including Hayashi, will be used in screening requests from six textbook publishers to reinstate references about the military's coercive role in ordering mass suicides and mass murder-suicides, government sources said.

    In the statement to the panel, Hayashi said, "The question is not whether there was an order from the military but the process that resulted in driving Okinawa residents to commit mass suicide. The residents committed suicide effectively under the military's orders," he said.

    Hayashi criticized the Textbook Authorization Council for "distorting and misusing" passages from his work on the Battle of Okinawa, published in 2001, in urging textbook publishers to change references on the military's role.

    In the book, Hayashi writes, "the Japanese military did not directly order the residents on (Okinawa's Zamami Island) to commit suicide."

    Hayashi said he rejected the education ministry's request not to make public his statement to the media before the textbook panel comes to a conclusion.

    He said he decided to air his statement because secret screening is one of the major causes behind the uproar over history textbooks.

    Education Minister Kisaburo Tokai told a news conference Tuesday he will refrain from commenting to help the textbook panel conduct its work in a calm atmosphere.

    In the initial screening process, the ministry instructed publishers to delete references to the military's role from high school textbooks on Japanese history to be used in the 2008 academic year starting next April. The publishers complied and revised the books.

    But the ministry's instruction sparked a huge outcry in Okinawa. A rally was held in September in Ginowan, just northeast of the prefectural capital Naha, demanding that the ministry retract the instruction and that the textbooks be restored to their original wording.

    Organizers put the number of protesters at about 110,000. It was the largest rally in Okinawa since its reversion to Japan from the United States in 1972.

    Amid rising protests from the prefecture, the education minister said in October that applications to modify the textbooks would be referred to the council for further screening.

    Earlier this month, Nobel Prize-winning novelist Kenzaburo Oe testified in court that he believes an order from the Japanese military led to the mass suicides. "I believe there was an order from the military," Oe, 72, told the Osaka District Court.

    Hayashi is known for his research on the Battle of Okinawa, Japanese atrocities in Southeast Asia and the military's use of sex slaves, who are euphemistically known in Japan as "comfort women."

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    morse1001 Guest
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    Interesting stuff, not only on the militarys part in the mass suicides but on the way educational books are controlled in Japan.

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    60 years on they are still trying to have themselves smell like roses.

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    The Japs smell of anything but roses over their doings during WW2. Halfway through reading 'Surviving the Sword' and what they did was barbaric and on the lines of Attila if not worse. I think the Allies were far to forgiving after the war. Any Jap who had anything to do with the barbaric things they did to both the Allied POW's and the native people of the places they conquerered should of been put into a prison camp like what the Allied POW's had to go through. Made to live in the same conditions, worked like a slave on rationed food and flogged everyday.
    Sorry but i have no time for the little yellow b******s. They can all commit hari kari for all i care.

    Sniper

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    We cannot blame the children for the sins of their fathers however the following generations came off very well for the amount of carnage and atrocities they committed.

    The US (Macarthur) and Britain agreed to no more trials of Japanese war criminals after 1947.

    King Macarthur got his way!

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