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Tokyo teacher embattled over war history
The Christian Science Monitor ^ | Nov 22,2005 | Robert Marquand

Posted on 11/23/2005 9:02:48 AM PST by dvan

TOKYO - Miyako Masuda is a 23-year veteran of public schools here. Like many Japanese history teachers of her generation, she dislikes new textbooks that frame Japan as the victim in World War II. It bothers her that books claiming America caused the war are now adopted by an entire city ward. In fact, Masuda disapproves of the whole nationalist direction of Tokyo public schools.

Yet until last year, Masuda, who calls herself "pretty ordinary," rarely went out of her way to disagree. Few teachers do.

But when a Tokyo city councilman in an official meeting said "Japan never invaded Korea," her history class sent an apology to Korean President Roh Moo-hyan - an action that sparked her removal from her classroom.

The war history dispute in Asia is now so front-and-center that it was cited by South Korea as a reason to avoid an upcoming December visit to Japan by Mr. Roh. Alongside the diplomatic row, the Masuda case shows how nationalist policies are creeping into the minutiae of daily life in Japan's capital city.

Masuda, who says her two sons have Korean friends, got censured after her class did a study group on Japan's occupation of Korea. Her social studies class wrote a letter of apology to Roh, and sent it to the Korean Embassy in Toyko. In a cover letter, Masuda said that councilman Koga Toshiaki's remarks were "a disgrace" by objective historical standards, but "regrettably [they] can be presented proudly as a triumph in the assembly of Tokyo, the capital of this country."

The class never heard from the Korean consul. But Masuda did hear from the Tokyo Board of Education. Her letter was discovered by a Yasukuni shrine support group and they complained to city officials. Masuda was told that while Mr. Koga did speak in public, it was "inappropriate" for Masuda to repeat his name in a letter that was not private, and a violation of city employee codes.

Masuda is now ordered to spend her days in a small room studying public servant regulations, a serious humiliation she says. She in turn is trying to fight in court.

Masuda's experience shows the growing power of Japanese nationalists, and their grass-roots influence in Tokyo, analysts say.

For example, last month Japanese leader Junichiro Koizumi positioned his ultranationalist protégé Shinzo Abe to be his successor, after Mr. Koizumi steps down in September. Mr. Abe, like Tokyo's hugely popular Mayor Ishihara, is a fan of the Tsukuru-Kai history textbooks that seek to restore a proud Japan by rewriting the past. Mr. Ishihara, for his part, directly appoints all six Tokyo school board members.

Tokyo schools reflect nationalist views: children pledging allegiance to the emperor as in the 1930s, school board members supporting Yasakuni shrine visits, and curriculums failing to mention Japan's invasion of Korea or China.

Masuda, for her part, insists it is wrong to teach untruths to students, for any reason.

"I feel it is my job to tell the truth, it is what I spend my life doing," she told the Monitor. "When something looks crooked I don't like it. I feel I want to make it straight. If you are straight it is better for everyone.

"I explain and teach the past. But I am now suspended as a history teacher for doing that, even though they say it is for administrative discipline."

In an interview, Masuda reads out the words of the Tokyo city council member from the official transcript: "It is not proper to describe a war of aggression by Japan. Where and when in the world did Japan ever invade? I'd like to ask, once and for all, when where and which country...."

At the APEC summit in South Korea last week, it was unclear whether Koizumi and Roh would even meet on the sidelines. The Korean president told Mr. Koizumi outright that his visits to the Yasakuni shrine, and the Tsukuru-Kai texts, were "provocative." Koizumi tried to say his visits to the shrine, where the remains of Class A war criminals are housed, symbolized the idea of never going to war again. Roh, according to Asahi Shimbun, told Koizumi, "No matter how positively we interpret your feelings, the people of South Korea will never accept it."

Masuda says some fellow teachers supported her at first in her current ordeal, but have since stopped. They fear of their own status in the school. Masuda now must report to the Tokyo Metropolitan School Personnel In-service Training Center, a place she describes in Kafkaesque terms.

Masuda seems a little stubborn, a little leftist, but a stickler for details in the way of junior high teachers around the world. She brightens immediately when the subject turns to teaching. She is proud her classes are not rote memory exercises typical in Japanese public schools. She requires "Discussion Papers" where students have to show how they arrive at conclusions. Papers deal with topics like Hiroshima and Iraq. Last year she showed her class a television documentary put out by Japanese national TV on Korean comfort women- how the Japanese government in the war had sent orders for brothels to be built in China with women dragooned to work there from all over Asia.

Currently, teachers that stress Japan's responsibility for wartime aggression are increasingly framed in Tokyo as "Marxists" living in the past.

Masuda's case has been picked up as a case of simple slander by the Tokyo media. A Japanese journalist with extensive experience points out that the Tokyo Asahi ran an item saying that Masuda was suspended for slandering the government officials and the publisher of the textbook.

The Asahi reporter sourced the story to the Tokyo Board of Education. Masuda's friends and fellow teachers protested to the Asahi reporter. They said the story was inaccurate, and that Masuda should have been talked to for balance.

So the Asahi reporter went back to the Board of Education and asked if his story was correct. They told him yes, his story was correct.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: distortion; history; japan; nationalism; wwii
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We've seen it in Europe with the rise of neo-Nazism. We've seen it in a dozen piddling little nations around the world. Now we see it in Japan. The rise of fierce nationalism that begins with rivising history.

What next? The return of imperial Japan with a new Tojo at the reins?

1 posted on 11/23/2005 9:02:50 AM PST by dvan
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To: dvan
It's just a matter of time before this dragon rears its head again.
2 posted on 11/23/2005 9:06:49 AM PST by blues_guitarist (http://mundane-noodle.blogspot.com)
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To: dvan
What next? The return of imperial Japan with a new Tojo at the reins?

Another Bomb?

3 posted on 11/23/2005 9:06:49 AM PST by headsonpikes (The Liberal Party of Canada are not b*stards - b*stards have mothers!)
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To: dvan

Thank God for honest persons. There are some in each country. Too bad they aren't a majoriy.


4 posted on 11/23/2005 9:07:09 AM PST by RoadTest (I saw the souls of them that were beheaded for the witness of Jesus - - - Rev. 20:4)
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To: dvan


Japanese culture dictates that Japanese are genetically superior. They value Japanese unity. Koreans and any other ethnicities are widely discriminated against.


5 posted on 11/23/2005 9:07:51 AM PST by LauraleeBraswell
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To: dvan

It appears to me that we get nationalism or Communism.


6 posted on 11/23/2005 9:08:25 AM PST by Blake#1
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To: dvan
"It is not proper to describe a war of aggression by Japan. Where and when in the world did Japan ever invade? I'd like to ask, once and for all, when where and which country...."

Good grief.


7 posted on 11/23/2005 9:10:06 AM PST by Petronski (Cyborg is the greatest blessing I have ever known.)
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To: dvan

ping


8 posted on 11/23/2005 9:11:35 AM PST by trailboss800
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To: dvan
As I have mentioned earlier, I once worked for a Japanese country. The older generation is very ashamed of WWII, while the younger only knows of Hiroshima.

Nothing to worry about though, the Japanese as a people are all aging and dieing out.
9 posted on 11/23/2005 9:12:20 AM PST by redgolum ("God is dead" -- Nietzsche. "Nietzsche is dead" -- God.)
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To: redgolum

I once worked for a Japanese country.>>>

You saying theres more than one Japanese country?


10 posted on 11/23/2005 9:15:08 AM PST by aft_lizard (What does G-d look like then if we evolved from nothing?See Genisis Ch 1:26-27)
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To: dvan
One thing that bothers me, is that we actually apologized for interning the Japanese in World War II. Japan has many religions today, but during WWII the one religion that dominated was Japanese Shintoism. The primary belief of this was that the Emperor was descended from God. Thus they worshiped the emperor of Japan. When Japanese immigrants came here, do you think they all of a sudden changed their religion?

Another Japanese value...loyalty. The Japanese believe in self sacrifice and loyalty to whatever they have pledged their loyalty to. During World War II it was to the good of their living God, the emperor of Japan. After the US had the emperor renounce his position as God, the Japanese displaced that cultural value to loyalty to the company. That's why Japan has so many hard workers and industry. Both the company and the workers are loyal to eachother. A worker would get a job for life.
11 posted on 11/23/2005 9:15:41 AM PST by LauraleeBraswell
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To: redgolum

> I once worked for a Japanese country.

Which one?


12 posted on 11/23/2005 9:17:29 AM PST by orionblamblam ("You're the poster boy for what ID would turn out if it were taught in our schools." VadeRetro)
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To: dvan

Ask a German under 30 who started WWII.


13 posted on 11/23/2005 9:17:33 AM PST by VoiceOfBruck (But what does chicken taste like?)
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To: VoiceOfBruck

What would they say?


14 posted on 11/23/2005 9:19:03 AM PST by Romish_Papist (Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam.)
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To: LauraleeBraswell

> When Japanese immigrants came here, do you think they all of a sudden changed their religion?

A lot of them did, yes. A great many Christian Japanese were locked up. I'f I recall correctly (and I may not), the large majority of Japanese Americans were Christian.

Certainly very, very few of them saw Hirohito as a god.


15 posted on 11/23/2005 9:19:28 AM PST by orionblamblam ("You're the poster boy for what ID would turn out if it were taught in our schools." VadeRetro)
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To: dvan; maikeru; Dr. Marten; Eric in the Ozarks; Al Gator; snowsislander; sushiman; ...
Had this teacher simply held the "study group on Japan's occupation of Korea" without the letter to the Korean embassy, nothing would have happened. That she chose to make an issue out of it and the councilman's comments got her in trouble: "the nail that sticks out gets pounded down" as they say in Japan.

Japan's white-washing of their historical transgressions is for sure absolutely wrong, but which one of Japan's neighbors doesn't do the same in their own history books?

Self-flagellation over past mistakes is not an Asian practice/custom. The "rise of Japanese militarism" is pure nonsense.

Japan * ping * (kono risuto ni hairitai ka detai wo shirasete kudasai : let me know if you want on or off this list)

16 posted on 11/23/2005 9:20:47 AM PST by DTogo (I haven't left the GOP, the GOP left me.)
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To: dvan
I wish we'd see some nationalism in THIS country! We are a Judeo-Christian country!

All Muzzies OUT! All illegals OUT!

17 posted on 11/23/2005 9:20:50 AM PST by hillary's_fat_a**
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To: dvan

Don't have any problem with fierce nationalism; wish we (the USA) had more.
Just want 'em to remember they did invade Korea (twice) and China and launched a (provoked, from their point of view) surprise attack on the US.
And I want them to remember what happened after we recovered.


18 posted on 11/23/2005 9:23:16 AM PST by Little Ray (I'm a reactionary, hirsute, gun-owning, knuckle dragging, Christian Neanderthal and proud of it!)
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To: aft_lizard
You saying theres more than one Japanese country?

There is more than one Japanese country. With all the raping and pillaging the Japanese did, there are very few pure Chinese or pure Koreans left.

19 posted on 11/23/2005 9:25:49 AM PST by BostonianRightist ("Moderation in pursuit of justice is no virtue." ~ Senator Goldwater)
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To: VoiceOfBruck
Ask a German under 30 who started WWII.

It's hard to find a German, under 30, who started WW2. ;^)

20 posted on 11/23/2005 9:31:29 AM PST by CarrotAndStick (The articles posted by me needn't necessarily reflect my opinion.)
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