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  • Sins of the fathers

    Ottawa Citizen, Canada
    March 3, 2007 Saturday
    Final Edition

    Sins of the fathers


    Japanese Prime Minister Shintaro Abe is damaging his country by
    denying the historical fact that, in the 1930s and 1940s, the
    Imperial Japanese Army forced Korean women into sexual slavery. Even
    worse, Mr. Abe is repudiating an apology for the wartime abuses that
    was issued by a Japanese government in 1993.

    National honour is important in Japan, and because of this cultural
    trait, some Japanese have had great difficulty confronting the sins
    of their fathers. But denial and equivocation does Japan no good. For
    one thing, there is the moral imperative to acknowledge the crimes.
    The victims deserve no less.

    Then there's the political and strategic imperative. Mr. Abe's
    provocations hinder good relations with countries such as China and
    South Korea. In the increasingly troubled waters of the North
    Pacific, where the containment of North Korea is a matter of vital
    importance to Japan, and cannot be achieved without support from
    Beijing and Seoul, Tokyo's blinkered version of history makes a
    difficult process harder to manage.

    This is not a uniquely Japanese problem. Some Turkish leaders
    continue to dilute or even deny the Armenian massacre. Turkey's
    unwillingness to confront its past has complicated the country's
    relationship with the rest of Europe.

    Any country that desires a place in the community of modern,
    civilized nations has no business committing offences against
    historical truth.
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