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Wars of remembrance

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  • Wars of remembrance

    Ottawa Citizen, Canada
    December 28, 2007 Friday
    Final Edition


    Wars of remembrance

    Pg. A14


    The struggle over how we confront painful events in our collective
    history can be almost as agonizing as the original events themselves.

    It can take generations of divisive conflict to come to terms with
    the past. The U.S. ended slavery in the mid-19th century, but it
    would be another 100 years before Americans truly accepted their
    founding creed that all men are created equal.

    Turkey still rejects the historical consensus that its persecution of
    Armenians during the First World War constituted genocide. The Roman
    Catholic Church needed centuries before finally addressing, at
    Vatican II, some of the ugly moments in its political and theological
    history. Such reckonings do not come easily.

    No collectivity is struggling with these issues more than today's
    Japanese. Japan is a highly civilized and productive society, and its
    people have a hard time acknowledging the barbarism that their
    fathers and grandfathers committed during the Second World War.

    Some Japanese have tried to deny, for example, that their country
    forced Korean women into sexual slavery. The Japanese political and
    academic establishment continues to fight a civil war over
    custodianship of wartime memories.

    It's worth noting this week a small victory for the forces of truth.
    The Japanese Education Ministry announced it will allow textbooks to
    acknowledge that the country's military encouraged mass suicide of
    Japanese civilians during the battle of Okinawa.

    This was near the end of the war, when Japanese soldiers spread false
    propaganda to their countrymen in Okinawa warning of American
    atrocities and suggesting that death was preferable to surrender.
    There's even evidence that grenades were distributed to civilians to
    facilitate their suicide.

    A shameful episode, to be sure. But the education ministry is right
    to have it taught in today's classrooms. Burying the past does not
    make it go away, but instead, festering, produces an even greater
    poison.
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