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  • Remembrance of things past

    Remembrance of things past

    South China Morning Post
    May 2, 2005

    Perspective in history is a necessary but elusive goal. Comments in my
    last article about Japan and its textbooks endeavoured to put them into
    a wider historical context. But that clearly touched a very raw nerve,
    and I received a flood of letters, some remarkably abusive. So here, I
    will look at some other aspects of history - but steer clear of China.

    It is a truism that some episodes of history acquire symbolic
    importance out of all proportion to their practical importance at
    the time. Let us look back to 1915, whose anniversaries are producing
    plenty of examples.

    Last Monday was Anzac Day, which commemorates the Australian and
    New Zealand Army Corps' losses in the Gallipoli campaign against
    Turkey during the first world war. Gallipoli, where more than 8,000
    Australians died during a nine -month campaign, is deeply embedded in
    the Australian psyche and national mythology. Heroism was embellished
    by some flamboyantly inaccurate accounts by the father of newspaper
    baron Rupert Murdoch, and later, fact and fiction merged to become
    a touchstone of nationalist sentiment. More French and twice as many
    Britons died there as Australians, and more Australians were killed
    the following year on the Somme and again in Flanders in 1917 than
    at Gallipoli. But Gallipoli was symbolic because it was the first
    bloodying of the new nation in a major battle and was one in which
    Australia and New Zealand played roles out of all proportion to
    their size.

    For non-Australian history, Gallipoli was a less important encounter
    than one which occurred at the very beginning of 1915, but which few
    people in the west or Australia have heard of - let alone seen fit to
    commemorate. That was the Battle of Sarikamis when, in a few days,
    80,000 Turks lost their lives to Russian forces and frostbite in
    midwinter in the mountains of eastern Anatolia.

    More important still, Sarikamis led to the Russian advance, and
    Russia's creation of a (Christian) Armenian state on Turkish soil.
    This last advance of Tsarist Russia, in turn, sparked massacres of
    Armenians throughout the Turkish part of the Ottoman empire. The
    Gallipoli invasion by western Christians the same year added fuel to
    Turkish Muslim communal violence and perhaps 500,000 deaths.

    Genocide of Armenians or not, the aftermath of Sarikamis has left
    a wound as deep as the Nanking massacre and continuing rows over
    Turkish guilt and Turkish textbooks. This issue may yet decide the
    crucial question of Turkish membership of the European Union.

    Did Australian Prime Minister John Howard and his British counterpart
    Tony Blair, who attended last week's Gallipoli commemoration, know
    about Sarikamis? Or were their school books also selective in the
    choice of heroism and cruelty?

    Judging by recent editorials, Southeast Asian textbooks may have some
    gaps, too. How honest are the Thai ones about their wartime alliance
    with Japan? In the Philippines, many members of the nationalist elite,
    including then president Corazon Aquino's future father-in-law, were
    in the puppet government of president Jose Laurel. He fled briefly
    to Japan but Laurel was never prosecuted, returned to politics and
    was nearly elected president in 1949.

    It is hard to blame the Filipinos, who had to exchange one yoke
    for another. Japanese occupation was unpleasant, but the biggest
    losses came with liberation in 1945 when "American Caesar" General
    Douglas MacArthur ordered an all-out assault on Japanese-occupied
    Manila. It cost 100,000 lives, mostly Filipinos, from air and
    artillery bombardment in what was the bloodiest city battle of the
    second world war after Stalingrad. Maybe it is best for people to
    forget some history, but historians should not.Philip Bowring is a
    Hong Kong-based journalist and commentator
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