{"id":3601,"date":"2014-09-05T01:00:53","date_gmt":"2014-09-05T05:00:53","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.dontow.com\/?p=3601"},"modified":"2014-09-08T10:40:21","modified_gmt":"2014-09-08T14:40:21","slug":"reflections-from-2014-peace-reconciliation-asia-study-tour","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.dontow.com\/2014\/09\/reflections-from-2014-peace-reconciliation-asia-study-tour\/","title":{"rendered":"Reflections from 2014 Peace & Reconciliation Asia Study Tour"},"content":{"rendered":"

This summer I had the opportunity to participate in a weekly demonstration that has been going on since January 8, 1992, making it the world’s longest longevity demonstration in history. \u00a0 The official name of this demonstration, also called weekly meeting, is the “Wednesday Demonstration Demanding Japan to Redress the Comfort Women Problems,” and it takes place every Wednesday at 12:00 noon in front of the Japanese Embassy in Seoul, South Korea. [1]\u00a0 This event was one of many meaningful and educational events that took place during this year’s July 12-24 “2014 Peace and Reconciliation Asia Study Tour.”[2]\u00a0 Besides Seoul, the tour also visited Shanghai, Nanjing, and Harbin in China.\u00a0 This article provides a brief summary [3] of some reflections from this Asia Study Tour.
\n<\/p>\n

Comfort Women:\u00a0<\/strong> This 1,136th weekly demonstration took place on July 23, 2014.\u00a0 Under a pleasant summer sky, the demonstration attracted several hundred people (first photo below; click on photo to get a larger picture), with young and old, Koreans and non-Koreans. and lasted exactly one hour.\u00a0 The center of the demonstration was a bronze statue in commemoration of the hundreds of thousands of comfort women during WWII and Gil Won-Ok, an 86 year-old Korean woman who at the age of 13 was forced to be a Japanese military sexual slave in Harbin and Shijiazhuang, China (second photo).\u00a0 Opposite the demonstration crowd was the Japanese Embassy in Seoul with closed blinds (third photo), and the objective of the demonstration is shown on the back of the yellow vests worn by the organizers and many sympathizers (fourth photo).<\/p>\n

\"7\/23\/14<\/a>

7\/23\/14 Comfort Women Demonstration in Seoul<\/p><\/div>\n

\"Center<\/a>

Center of attention is former comfort woman Gil Won-Ok and Comfort Woman Statue<\/p><\/div>\n

\"Opposite<\/a>

Opposite the demonstration crowd is the Japanese Embassy in Seoul<\/p><\/div>\n

\"Demonstration<\/a>

Demonstration objective is on the back of yellow vest<\/p><\/div>\n

Comfort women was also the subject at our first stop in Shanghai, where we visited Professor Su Zhi Liang ( \u8607 \u667a\u826f) <\/span>of the Chinese Comfort Women Research Center at Shanghai Normal University, whose primary research is on this subject for the last 20 years.\u00a0 He and his wife Professor Chen Lifei (\u9673 \u9e97 \u83f2) <\/span>have found and documented the history of many former Chinese comfort women and provided assistance to many of them.\u00a0 They once had to walk seven hours to the top of a mountain to find the house of a former comfort woman.\u00a0 He reported that with the help of many pro-bono righteous Japanese and Chinese lawyers, many lawsuits have been brought to the courts in Japan during the last 15-20 years.\u00a0 Many of them went to the Japanese Supreme Court, but all failed for various reasons, including (1) the statue of limitations has passed, (2) Chinese government waived WWII compensation when China and Japan signed their Treaty of Peace and Friendship in 1978, and (3) foreign individuals do not have the right to sue the Japanese government in Japan.<\/p>\n

As in other countries, comfort women, especially in earlier periods, often faced discrimination or ostracizing by their own family, community, or government.\u00a0 Even to today, they often do not receive as much support from their own government as they should, considering the magnitude and the life-lasting suffering that they have to endure. [4]\u00a0 It really saddens you when you hear what these women had to endure when they were just young girls in their teens or early twenties, and the courage they exhibit during all these years facing almost insurmountable physical, emotional, and psychological barriers.\u00a0 It is also gratifying to see that there are so many young people who enthusiastically show their support and participate in the Weekly Demonstrations in Seoul.<\/p>\n

Forced Laborers:<\/strong>\u00a0 In Nanjing, besides learning about the Nanking Massacre, we also heard about the forced labor atrocity from Attorney Kang Jiang (\u5eb7<\/span>\u5065<\/span>) and Professor Bu Ping (\u6b65\u5e73<\/span>) of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.\u00a0 This is a massive issue involving as many as 10 million Chinese forced laborers.\u00a0 Remember that Japan is a small country with a corresponding population whose men were scattered all over Asia fighting wars.\u00a0 They needed a large number of men to work on producing the food and suppliers for their large Japanese army.\u00a0 According to an official report from the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs dated 1946 when they had already lost the war and were trying to erase or at least reduce the magnitude of their crimes, there were 40,000 Chinese forced laborers in Japan, which was probably an underestimate by an order of magnitude.\u00a0 Since most of the Chinese forced laborers were working in various parts of China, and not Japan, the 10M number of Chinese forced laborers may not be that surprising.<\/p>\n

The working conditions were atrocious, e.g., the forced laborers had to crawl on their belly for about 30 minutes just to enter the mine to work because the height of the mine tunnel was only 70 centimeters.\u00a0 The treatment was completely inhumane, with brutal or even deadly punishment for any stoppage of work to rest or stretch, and they were fed with sub-minimal food, which was completely contrary to Japanese reports and textbooks that the Chinese laborers were treated well.\u00a0 The resulting death rate was often as high as 50%, and in certain places the blind rate\u00a0 was also close to 50%.\u00a0 Many lawsuits were filed in Japan.\u00a0 The Chinese forced laborers won several cases up to the district courts, but they all failed at the Japanese Supreme Court.\u00a0 The reasons given were similar to the comfort women cases, due to the expiration of the statue of limitations or the Chinese government already waived compensations.\u00a0 Nevertheless, in one case, a Japanese Supreme Court justice noted in an appendix that the Chinese laborers were treated very badly and the Japanese companies should try to resolve the cases.<\/p>\n

Unlike the comfort women situation, Chinese forced laborers can sue Japanese corporations in Chinese courts since although individuals may not be able to sue the Japanese government, they can sue the Japanese corporations.\u00a0 Also, keep in mind that individual Chinese citizens have not waived compensations, and many of these Japanese corporations are still doing business in China.\u00a0 That is exactly what has happened since February of this year, and several such cases have been accepted to be heard in Chinese courts.<\/p>\n

It is important to note that the Chinese Oversea Association in Japan played an important and helpful role by providing to the forced laborers and their legal teams a lot of relevant documents\/records, such as the names of the involved corporations and the locations of their work, which were often kept secretive from the workers.\u00a0 They had received many of these documents\/records from honorable Japanese personnel.<\/p>\n

Chemical Warfare:<\/strong>\u00a0 Professor Bu Ping also discussed chemical warfare conducted by Japan on China.\u00a0 This is another massive atrocity that is still haunting the Chinese today. First, the Japanese produced thousands of tons of toxic chemicals which went into millions of chemical weapons.\u00a0 It has been estimated that during the 14 years of the Second Sino-Japanese War (1931-1945), Japan used chemical weapons more than 2,000 times in 77 counties of 14 provinces in direct violation of the 1925 Geneva Protocol on prohibition on the use of chemical weapons, which Japan had also signed. These attacks killed tens of thousands of Chinese, including many civilians. All Japanese people know about the droppings of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but few Japanese know about the use of chemical weapons in China by the Japanese military.<\/p>\n

Without exaggeration, hundreds of thousands of these chemical weapons were left in China after the end of WWII.\u00a0 Since 1999, there is agreement between Japan and China that Japan admits leaving these weapons in China and Japan will provide the technology and money to work with China on finding and removing these weapons.\u00a0 This was supposed to be completed by 2007.\u00a0 However, the completion date was extended to 2012, and then extended again to 2017, and it is unlikely that the 2017 date can be met.\u00a0 In the meantime, such weapons could explode during excavations in construction projects.\u00a0 In our visit to Harbin, Heilongjiang Province in northeast China on 7\/19\/14, we heard from two victims of just such a chemical weapon explosion in 2003 near Harbin. Both men and their daughters suffered serious physical and mental disabilities.\u00a0 Although they received some financial compensation from Japan [5], those funds were quickly used up in several months of medical treatment, and all four victims still need medical treatments for an extended period.\u00a0 They are trying to get more help from the Chinese government.<\/p>\n

There could be another long-term disaster for the world from the remnants of Japan’s chemical weapons from WWII.\u00a0 After Japan’s defeat in 1945, to reduce evidence of their crime, the Japanese government dumped many metal containers of poisonous gases into the ocean near Japan and China.\u00a0 In the future, when these containers leak, will the poisonous gases contained inside create harmful effects to the world’s environment and people?<\/p>\n

Biological Warfare and Human Experimentation:\u00a0 <\/strong>The visit to Harbin’s “The Museum of War Crime Evidence by Japanese Army Unit 731” gave rise to a most haunting experience.\u00a0 Unit 731 was the largest of many Japanese biological and chemical research centers and factories in China during WWII.\u00a0 Unit 731 was a gigantic complex covering six square kilometers and consisted of more than 150 buildings.\u00a0 Up to 3,000 Japanese staff members worked there, with 300-500 medical doctors and scientists.\u00a0 It is most likely the world’s largest biological\/chemical warfare research center and factory ever.\u00a0 Its infamous experiments were live vivisection on living human beings without the use of anesthesia.\u00a0 For example, the Japanese military wanted to find out the effects of various biological weapons on the internal organs of a person while he was still alive, and the use of anesthesia could alter the effects on the person.<\/p>\n

A deadly output of Unit 731 was Japan’s biological weapons.\u00a0 Depending on the strictness of the evidence for the actual use of such biological weapons by Japan in China during WWII, the number of actual applications outside of the laboratory experiments ranges from a dozen to many dozens to even more than one hundred.\u00a0 In spite of the immoral, illegal, and highly deadly activities that took place at Unit 731, none of its leaders, including Surgeon General Shiro Ishii, the Director of Unit 731, was ever prosecuted by the WWII War Crime Tribunal.\u00a0 This was because of an agreement made between Japan and the U.S. that these people would not be prosecuted in exchange for the information and knowledge that they have gained which would be of tremendous value to furthering the U.S.’s research in biological\/chemical weapons. [6]<\/p>\n

Concluding Remarks: \u00a0<\/strong>The 2014 Peace and Reconciliation Asia Study Tour was emotionally draining, but at the same time highly educational and worthwhile.\u00a0 Without learning about this part of history, and especially without seeing evidence and talking to the survivors, it is hard to think that such massive and inhumane atrocities that one group of human beings would want to inflict on another group of human beings.\u00a0 But these things did occur.\u00a0 Therefore, it becomes our responsibility to share that knowledge with the rest of the world, and to make sure that this kind of inhumanity will not occur again, anywhere in the world.<\/p>\n

 <\/p>\n

————————————————-<\/p>\n

[1] The Wednesday Demonstration was listed in March 2002 in the Guinness Book of Records as the world’s oldest rally on a single theme.<\/p>\n

[2] This Asia Study Tour was organized by the Toronto Alliance for Learning and Preserving the History of WWII in Asia (Toronto ALPHA). The “New Jersey Alliance for Learning and Preserving the History of WWII in Asia” (NJ-ALPHA) sent six people to this tour.<\/p>\n

[3] To keep the article from being very long, I included only a few highlights from this tour.<\/p>\n

[4] Many of these sufferings last throughout their life-time.\u00a0 For example, about half of the comfort women could not get pregnant because of the medicine given to them by the Japanese doctors.<\/p>\n

[5] It is not clear, at least to me, who provided the compensation.<\/p>\n

[6] For more information on this subject, see, e.g.,<\/p>\n