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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, August 09, 2001 |
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Row over new textbooks in Japan
By Gautaman Bhaskaran
TOKYO, AUG 8. If there are accusations of education being
saffronised in India, there are charges of school textbooks in
Japan glossing over the country's wartime atrocities.
In fact, a book, written by a group of nationalist authors, has
been approved for the first time by the Tokyo Metropolitan Board
of Education for use at three schools for disabled children. The
move has been criticised on two grounds. One, much to the chagrin
of China and South Korea, the text is said to paint a brighter,
rosier picture of Japan's role in the Pacific war belittling the
enormous suffering the Chinese and Koreans bore. Two, teachers
have said that the Tokyo Board decided to target the handicapped
institutions to make it easier for others to adopt the
controversial book.
A teacher was reported to have said that the text ``almost
justifies Japan's action in the war, when human rights of the
disabled were violated with impunity''. However, the authors of
the book feel that the texts now in use are ``self-
denigrating''. They portray Japan as an aggressor. It was time
that the average Japanese was taught to respect and love his
country, they felt.
The textbook affair comes at a time when China and South Korea,
victims of Japan's wartime aggressions, are angry over a plan by
the Japanese Prime Minister, Mr. Junichiro Koizumi, to visit the
Yasukuni shrine on August 15, the anniversary of the nation's
surrender during World War II. Three of the 17 Ministers here
have confirmed that they will visit the shrine. Five of the
remaining 14 have refused to say what their plans are.
Mr. Takeo Hiranuma, Minister for Economy, Trade and Industry,
said his visit - and also that of Mr. Koizumi - merely reflected
a sense of respect to the departed. But he did admit that trade
ties between Japan and China could be affected in the short term.
The shrine, of course, commemorates even war criminals who were
hanged after the hostilities ceased.
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