originally posted by Rolex
Sorry, but the 'island' theory is just an excuse the oyaji's use and
oh Rolex, ya call me an oyaji!? Sheesh, I didn't think I was that old...
originally posted by Rolex
Japan continues to be an insular society - perhaps the most insular in the world - by choice.
yes, I agree... it is more by choice today, rather than a physical barrier especially with all the mass transportation and information highway available today. Not to forget that we have mass imports of material from all parts of the world. However, I would not characterize it as an excuse just yet, because it still is very real as behavior of people. It helps them set the scope of work, laws, standards, etc. It is just inherent on behavior. To quote Dr. Edwin Reichauer from his book The Japanese Today, "Japan's isolation is now only a psychological remanant."
However, this must change... and soon, as we have a shortage labor force. Soon, we will be importing people together with their ideas, etc. not just material. If we don't open up our society, we will not be doing that adequately.
originally posted by Kweassa
What worries the Korean people, in the article Karnak has linked, is that the new history textbooks are 'revisioned' by the (not sure if I translated this right) "The Society for Making New Textbooks", which its political/cultural heritage almost directly descends from days of 19th century expansionists.
If I take this pessimistically, this is a huge problem that we have been seeing again and again. This is no good... However, if I take this optimistically, it is now provoking communication between Korea and Japan. For example, just yesterday morning, there was news on NHK, the national TV station, that both Korea and Japan has decided to setup a research team in order to come to a common understanding on history. This could have been attempted before, but if it has it hasn't succeeded yet. However, we have to try this again and again.
Where I get this kind of optimism, is what I saw on TV. I forget the name of the show... it was where Beat Takeshi, a comedian in Japan, got representatives from different countries and basically provoke them to talk, on sensitive topics like our Prime Minister visiting the Yasukuni Shrine, which holds remains of Class A War Criminals, and textbook issues. The show as in the beginning... ugly, at least by Japanese standards... people yelling at each other, interjecting while the other was speaking. It was more throwing and clashing of opinions, without listening. However, one of the comments made was something to the extent that we have to talk, even amongst the Japanese, in order for us to go somewhere.
It is the case that I also have difficulty talking about such issues even amongst my colleagues at work. This is not something that is easy to bring up. I did manage to discuss briefly on the skin issue, though. I brought it up because I noticed that the word Kamikaze seemed to be associated with the Navy rather than the Army, and I ask two guys what they knew about the word. We didn't have an answer to that question but I explained why I brought it up, explained the game AH2, and what is being talked about. They said that there is no way to stop someone from using the skin, but they wouldn't like people using it without knowing that wording meant.
If I don't bring it up like that, we usually don't talk about such issues. People in Japan tend to avoid such issues... why?... probably because it is not pleasant to talk about. We really have to get the energy and the guts to admit our wrong doings. The easiest way to deal with such confrontation is to say that we were coarsed into the war, and that we had no other choice, etc. which is probably what we see usually. If this is handled wrongly, it ends up in placing politicians like Gov. Ishihara as head of Tokyo. He does have good policies for pollution control like cutting down on diesel engines in Tokyo, but I do not agree with his views on military and history.
Anyway, back to optimism, it was on that same TV show I think... where they were interviewing a woman from Southeast Asia who married a Japanese man. She was introduced to his mother and the mother asked her how she felt about Japan. The woman being young said outright about Japan not apologizing for the war and that she was not happy about that. The mother, astounded and shocked, got down on her knees and apologized profuriously for what happened in WW2. What struck me the most is not what the mother did but how the hosts of the show reacted to this interview. There was a bit of silence, some of them had tears in their eyes and one of them said, "I am relieved that someone could actually say that [the apology]".
While it is a subject that is hard to bring up, I do have some friends who shares my views. A colleague of mine who I worked with during my graduate school came from Nagasaki. He carries a Hibakusha card (certification that he is a decendant or a victim of the atomic bomb). He gets to have medical treatment paid by the national government. I have high respect for him. I would have expected him to be nationalistic, especially if he felt victimized. On contrary it was the other way around, maybe because he was from Nagasaki, which was the only open port in Japan when we secluded ourselves from the rest of the world. He was the type of person who says that we have to apologize and set things right, to get on with our lives.
On the dark side, about 10 years ago, the Mayor of Nagasaki openly criticized that the emperor has not apologized for WW2. He was shot by a ultra-rightist.
A couple of years ago, we shot and sank a North Korean spy boat. This was retrieved from the ocean floor and was displayed in Tokyo. I went to see it with a colleague of mine and I was not happy about his comment that this justifies that we need a military. Well, these guys were coming to Japan to sell drugs and we are buying from them. Although, they have military backup, they are here on business.
We recently had a Chinese submarine infringing Japanese territorial waters. This incident was not really helpful...
There is a rekindling of territorial disputes like Kweassa mentions... well, I could go on and on... but I need a break from this... I donno how to conclude but this is what I think... I think this is enough... for the moment at least...