BBC World Histories Magazine - 03.2020

(Joyce) #1

Is there a note of


insincerity, audible


only to Koreans


and Chinese, that


renders Japanese


contrition void?


the mid-19th century, perhaps the Jap-
anese would not have had such an easy
ride through the region later on.


Western perspective
Of course, in all of this I was guilty of
a dreadful western-centric solipsism.
China, Korea and Japan didn’t need us
to stoke their mutual hatreds. They’ve
mistrusted, resented, detested and
fought each other for centuries. Some
historians argue that the roots of this lie
in the ancient Confucian hierarchy, with
China as the ‘Middle Kingdom’ called
on to civilise the world, Korea as the
lesser sibling and Japan as the lowest in
the hierarchy. In militar y terms, though,
the conflicts date back at least to the 13th
century, when Mongol fleets carrying
Chinese and Korean troops were twice
repelled by the original kamikaze – liter-
ally ‘divine wind’ – while attempting to
invade Japan’s Kyushu island.
Hostilities between Japan and Korea
were reignited during the Imjin Wars
of the late 16th centur y, when Japan’s
unifying daimyō (feudal lord) Toyotomi
Hideyoshi invaded the peninsula and in-
flicted atrocities upon the Koreans. These
included the killing of tens of thousands
of Koreans and removal of their noses as
trophies, which were interred in hanazuka
(‘nose mounds’) in Kyoto and Bizen.
The Imjin Wars are still keenly
remembered in Korea, yet largely
unknown outside the region. More than
a million Koreans – almost one-third
of the population – are believed to have


died. “Hell cannot be in some other place
apart from this,” wrote a Japanese Bud-
dhist monk who witnessed one massacre.
Japan visited a great deal more
hellishness upon its neighbours during
the first half of the 20th century, before
itself suffering the wrath of the US in


  1. Further suffering was subsequently
    inflicted by the dictatorial rulers of Chi-
    na, Korea and Taiwan upon their own
    people, yet it is the Japanese who remain
    the primary focus of resentment in the
    region. Before I started my journey, I
    believed that I had a reasonable grasp of
    the charge sheet against Japan. I didn’t: it
    was worse than I thought. But if Europe
    and Israel could come to terms with
    Germany’s war crimes, and the Philip-
    pines, Indonesia and other countries also
    occupied by Japan (including, of course,
    Taiwan) no longer seem to harbour
    much animosity towards the Japanese,
    why do the Koreas and China persist
    with their ill-feeling?


As well as the various disputed
islands, the Chinese and Korean people
I spoke to most often cited as a factor the
lack of apology on the part of the Japa-
nese. Many mentioned Tokyo’s Yasukuni
Shrine, where war fallen – including
more than 1,000 convicted of war crimes


  • are commemorated, and where senior
    Japanese politicians still worship.
    Again, some blame here can be
    apportioned to the US. With the Treaty
    of Versailles and its harsh consequences
    on post-First World War Germany still
    fresh in its memory, not to mention
    anxiety about Communist China, the
    US was notably lenient on Japan’s leaders
    post-1945. But numerous Japanese
    prime ministers and emperors have since
    offered apologies to their former enemies,
    expressing ‘remorse’ or ‘deep regret’
    almost on an annual basis. Is there a bat
    squeak of insincerit y, audible only to Ko-
    reans and Chinese, that renders Japanese
    contrition void?
    Actually, there does seem to be. But
    part of the problem might also be that,
    compared with the Chinese and even
    in some ways the South Koreans, the
    Japanese enjoy a high level of freedom of
    expression. For a variety of murky rea-
    sons, a minority continues to exploit that
    freedom to provoke its neighbours.
    Yet there is hope. It lies, I think,
    in continuing cultural and economic
    exchange: it lies with smartphones and
    K-Pop, kimchi, anime and manga, tour-
    ism and technology, with Pokémon and
    computer chips. Here’s hoping.


A relief depicting Japanese
soldiers on the Yasukuni
Shrine in Tokyo. Chinese
and Korean people criticise
senior Japanese politicians
who worship at the shrine
commemorating war
fallen, including more than
1,000 war criminals

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