Sunday, 31 March 2013
Thursday, 28 March 2013
Thursday, 21 March 2013
Australian studies and the Cowra breakout
Blog writting is winding down and preparation for classes is ramping up.
This year I am teaching 11 groups of students 8 different subjects.
The biggest class of students is likely to be just under 40. If I am lucky one or two might be ten or less.
One of the classes I'll be teaching is Australian Studies.
Honestly, it goes in the same basket as Canadian Studies and I can't imagine who in their right mind would pick it .... It's up to me (with the assistance my ever helpful, benevolent mother) to come up with the material for it.
I'm trying to pick topics that will both let them know about Australia but also give them a chance to reflect on Japan - indigenous people, immigration, diversity, formation of nation, and world war II... The war in China is well known, but less talked about is the war in South East Asia and I think probably most Japanese are unaware that places such as Sydney, Newcastle, Darwin, Townsville and Broome were also bombed. I'm looking at both the Cowra Breakout and either Changi or the Thai Burma Railway, but it has been difficult to find Japanese sources in translation. By sheer chance this article, with anecdotes from a Cowra Breakout survivor turned up in the Japan Times this week.
The full article is at the link below.
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/life/2013/03/17/general/ghosts-of-cowra-breakout-haunt-japan-to-this-day/
This year I am teaching 11 groups of students 8 different subjects.
The biggest class of students is likely to be just under 40. If I am lucky one or two might be ten or less.
One of the classes I'll be teaching is Australian Studies.
Honestly, it goes in the same basket as Canadian Studies and I can't imagine who in their right mind would pick it .... It's up to me (with the assistance my ever helpful, benevolent mother) to come up with the material for it.
I'm trying to pick topics that will both let them know about Australia but also give them a chance to reflect on Japan - indigenous people, immigration, diversity, formation of nation, and world war II... The war in China is well known, but less talked about is the war in South East Asia and I think probably most Japanese are unaware that places such as Sydney, Newcastle, Darwin, Townsville and Broome were also bombed. I'm looking at both the Cowra Breakout and either Changi or the Thai Burma Railway, but it has been difficult to find Japanese sources in translation. By sheer chance this article, with anecdotes from a Cowra Breakout survivor turned up in the Japan Times this week.
The full article is at the link below.
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/life/2013/03/17/general/ghosts-of-cowra-breakout-haunt-japan-to-this-day/
BY NOBUKO TANAKA
SPECIAL
TO THE JAPAN TIMES
·
MAR 17, 2013
·
Prisoner A: ” ‘Never live to experience the shame
of being taken prisoner by the enemy’ … that’s what the Imperial Japanese
Military Regulations say, hence there must be no prisoners. So what’s happening
here now are the dreams of ghosts” — from “Cowra no Hancho Kaigi” (“Honchos’ Meeting in Cowra”).
Last week in Tokyo’s
bohemian Shimokitazawa quarter, I never expected to encounter one of those
“ghosts.” Yet there he was at the Suzunari Theater, one of the few survivors of
a breakout by Japanese troops from a POW camp in Australia that featured in a
play whose premiere I attended there the night before…
Teruo Murakami, who
had come from distant Tottori Prefecture to see the play, told me he was sent
to the Cowra camp 300 km west of Sydney in New South Wales a few months before
the breakout by 1,104 Japanese captives on Aug. 5, 1944.
After seeing service
from Korea to China to Rabaul in New Britain (in present-day Papua New Guinea),
this nonagenarian recounted being captured by U.S. soldiers there.
“When I was taken to
Cowra, I never imagined I would ever see Japan again,” he said. “And actually,
when I finally got home my family said a ghost had returned from the war.”
At the camp, Murakami
said he’d lived a rather heavenly life, for the most part killing time playing
mah-jongg with his hut-mates using pieces they’d fashioned themselves. “Others
played games with cards they’d made and some played baseball with bats they
carved,” he recounted, seeing in his mind’s eye episodes I’d only watched being
acted out on stage.
But if life at Cowra
was so easy-going, why did all the prisoners decide to stage their near-suicidal
breakout together? It’s this question, above all, that mystifies many beyond
these shores. So I asked Murakami for his explanation.
“The prisoners didn’t
know how the war was actually going,” he began. “But we had no doubt about the
rule that Imperial Japanese troops must not allow themselves to become
prisoners of the enemy. So there was no alternative for us except to die, and
we agreed to finish our lives that way. Yet because of a basic human instinct,
many of the men — including me — didn’t want to die.”
But when the time
came, Murakami was fated to find he’d run down a track to a dead end, where he
jumped into a ditch as bullets flew around. Soon, Australian soldiers came and
took him back to his fire-damaged hut, where he fully expected to be executed
for trying to escape. To his astonishment, though, he was set to work cleaning
up the mess.
Since then, Murakami has revisited Cowra
several times with other survivors, and now he gives lectures to young
Japanese, just as he’d talked at length with the play’s cast during their
preparations
Wednesday, 20 March 2013
18 years & o higan.
Today marks the eighteenth anniversary of the Aum Shin Rikyo's sarin attack on the Tokyo Metro lines. It is the first year since it happened that none of the people wanted for committing the crime are still on the loose. The remaining two were arrested last year. The fatalities may seem relatively low at 13, but more than 1000 people were injured. For many who survived their injuries were extreme and gruesome - in some cases contact lenses melted into people's eyes.
Hiro was on a business trip in America the day it happened. He would usually have exited the subway at Kamiyacho, one stop after Kasumigaseki on the Hibiya line at around the time the attacks occurred.
Today is also the equinox, marking the March grave visiting season, ohigan. This year, the cherry blossoms are blooming early and today walking through Yanaka cemetery, the cherry blossoms met the ohigan flowers. Sakura certainly makes for cheerier grave visiting. (compare last year's ohigan)
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Aum Wanted Poster http://en.academic.ru/pictures/enwiki/83/Sarin_Wanted_Poster.jpg |
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The beginning of Sakura blossoms & ohigan flowers |
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Sakura |
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