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June 1, 2007

Taiwan independence leader to visit Yasukuni Shrine

Now, it's one thing if the hated Japanese and their former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi make visits to the infamous Yasukuni Shrine.  The disgust with the Japanese runs deep here, and Koizumi's decision to attend the shrine each year he was in office just confirmed Chinese beliefs that Japan, and its ruling Liberal Democratic Party, had not "come to terms with history."

But now this... former Taiwan President Lee Tung-hui plans to visit the shrine to pay respects to Japan's war dead.  Why, you ask?  According to an article in the Taipei Times, he will be honoring his brother. 

Former president Lee Teng-hui yesterday said he would like to visit the Yasukuni shrine, a controversial memorial to war dead where his elder brother is enshrined.

Lee's elder brother served in the Japanese navy and died while on duty in February 1945 in the Philippines.

"I have not yet decided on the timing, but since I am here, I think that I should go see my brother," Lee told reporters on his arrival at Narita airport near Tokyo.

"I will meet my brother for the first time in 60 years," Lee said.

Lee, accompanied by his wife Tseng Wen-hui, left for Japan yesterday for a 10-day visit.

Speaking to Japanese reporters on the flight from Taipei, the 84-year-old former leader said he wanted to pray at the Yasukuni shrine because he did not know how much longer he would live.

The issue has touched a nerve in Taiwan, and rightly so.  Last year I made a visit to Yaskuni myself.  It's a very sombre place, and steeped in history. Adjacent to the shrine is the Yasukuni War Museum, which I also visited.  Outside the building it lists the different exhibits inside.  For example, "World War II", "The Meiji Restoration", etc.  And at the bottom of the list is the last exhibit, simply titled "The China Incident."

Yasukuni Exhibits 

Inside, great pains are made by the museum to explain that Japan was never at war with China, because Tokyo had never "declared" war.  Thus, the word "incident".  After reading Iris Chang's excellent book on the Nanjing Massacre, I was anxious to read what the museum had to say.  Indeed, it was simply called the "Nanking Incident". This is the exact wording:

After the Japanese surrounded Nanking in December 1937, Gen. Matsui Iwane distributed maps to his men with foreign settlements and the Safety Zone marked in red ink. Matsui told them that they were to observe military rules to the letter and that anyone committing unlawful acts would be severely punished.  He also warned Chinese troops to surrender, but Commander-in-Chief Tang Shengzhi ignored the warning.  Instead, he ordered his men to defend Nanking to the death, and then abandoned them.  The Chinese were soundly defeated, suffering heavy casualties.  Inside the city, residents were once again able to live their lives in peace.

I added the Italics. If that's not enough, here is the official Japanese take on "the Russo-Japanese War to the Manchurian Incident".

Japan's victory in the Russo-Japanese War and subsequent annexation of Korea resolved concerns about national security, which had been festering for years. Relief and exultation delayed the Japanese response to a new world situation. When World War I began, Japan cooperated with the Allies, capturing German possessions (Qingdao and the Mariana, Caroline and Marshall Islands), and dispatching a special fleet to the Mediterranean Sea and other troops to Siberia. Meanwhile, at the Washington Conference in the U.S., plans were made to disrupt the new, postwar order in Asia and to prevent further Japanese expansion. The Chinese, now nationalistic and xenophobic after the revolution, focused their animosity on Japan.  An anti-Japanese movement in Manchuria and discord within the Kwantung Army resulted in the Manchurian Incident and the establishment of Manchukuo.

The exhibit goes on to say that Manchukuo is territory that is "currently governed by the Chinese."

Clearly, this is the way that the Japanese military establishment views its past, and on that note I sympathize with the Chinese.  Anyone that knows me knows I love Japan and Japanese culture.  Japan, and what the country has been able to accomplish in the past 60 years, sets a great example for other countries, like China.  Japan is industrious, the people are hard-working, and it has been able to pull off something perhaps China is failing at: holding onto old traditions while embracing western culture and modernity (which are not the same, I hasten to add).

Nonetheless, places like the Yasukuni Museum puts a taint on Japan. I have no problem with Japanese leaders remembering their war dead, but enshrining class A war criminals goes too far. 

Back to Lee Tung-hui. His visit is being criticized by lawmakers in his former party, the KMT. This, from a second article in the Taipei Times:

KMT lawmakers Hung Hsiu-chu and Joanna Lei called a press conference yesterday morning to condemn Lee's planned visit, calling Lee a "liar" for saying he wished to honor his deceased brother.

They said the spirit of Lee's elder brother had been brought back to Taiwan about 20 years ago and put in Chihua Temple, Peipu Township, Hsinchu County.

They showed a picture of a tablet bearing the Japanese name of Lee's brother, his date of birth and pointed to the name of Lee's father, Lee Ching-long, as evidence.

"There is no tablet, remains or any spirit of his brother at Yasukuni. There is only an enshrinement list there. The spirits of [Taiwanese] soldiers enshrined at Yasukuni were all relocated to the Chihua temple. I don't know what Lee is going to honor." Hung said.

Hung said she suspected that Lee's planned visit to the shrine was aimed at infuriating China.

I would guess the two lawmakers are correct.  As much as I support the right of the Taiwanese to determine their own future, actions like Lee's can only be seen to enrage China, and he has a long history of such actions. Hopefully Chinese leaders will ignore Lee's provocative move.

May 28, 2007

Monday's Meditations and Musings

Here are a couple of links that I thought I'd pass along:

  • One of the best, and funniest blogs on Japan is JapunditThis post is a disturbing example of Japan's odd sex-crazed culture. (I've never been able to fathom the prim-and-proper, conservative nature of Japanese people, and how that meshes with nearly-naked photos of underage girls in public places, which I saw on Tokyo's confusing metro system the last time I was in town.) The site usually shows hilarious forms of Chinglish (is it still Chinglish if it's translated from Japanese?) and a collection of T-shirts with seemingly random English words strung together. I guess it's a Pan-Asian thing.
  • Beijing-based corresondent Geoffrey York of the Globe and Mail has an interesting article on Rupert Hoogewerf's famous rich list.  Each year he gathers the names of China's richest people. In the past, when people were ashamed of their wealth, people would beg and bribe him to keep their names off the list. But times are changin', and China's rich and powerful feel much more comfortable letting others know about it.
  • And you thought Memoirs of a Geisha was controversial.  The Washington Post is reporting that two films about the Nanjing Massacre are underway. This year is the 70th anniversary of the killing, and comes at a sensitive time as Japan and China begin to repair relations. I actually went to Nanjing a few weeks ago to visit the war museum there, but sadly it was closed for renovations. On a side note, I found it a bit surreal to walk around the city, and see so many girls in tight mini-skirts on the arms of foreigners.  I know it's fine, and all, and the massacre was a long time ago.  Just odd thinking about the city's past, and the suffering of its people. It's like the partying and hooking up was happening on a grave site.
  • Shanghaiist has a great post (albeit about a week old) about Shanghai being the sex capital of the world.  A reporter from a Japanese magazine says "Right now, Shanghai is the hottest spot in Asia -- believe it. It's got those famous karaoke clubs with hostesses, massage parlors and erotic baths. It's evolved beyond anything we Japanese can imagine." And that's saying something.
  • I know there are very few people in China who follow British Columbia politics, but there are some.  If that's you, I highly recommend Sean Holman's Public Eye Online. He has excellent sources and has broken some major stories.
  • And finally, the Vancouver Giants have won the Memorial Cup!

And on a personal note, it looks like a decision has been made.  I blogged earlier about whether to stay in Shanghai or return to Beijing for schooling. Despite the fact nearly everyone I've spoken too in Shanghai thinks I must be certifiably crazy, I will be returning to the dusty capital. Let's hope I'm doing the right thing.

I should arrive in town on Sunday. 

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