festivalia

Yes, It’s been some time since I’ve written. It’s been busy, teaching English and all that. This weekend was a huge festival in Asakusa involving a shrine carried by men in fundoshi and wearing happi coats. Walking to work at 9am on Sunday morning seeing the Asahi cans strewn around the streets did not really add to the traditional ambience. My co-worker said that the festival went on to something amzing … but by that time I was at work.

A Little History

Japan stands by 1993 apology over WW2 sexual slavery

Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Aso reassured Korean Foreign Minister Song Min-soon that Japan stood by its 1993 apology (made by then-Chief Cabinet Secretary Yohei Kono) over sexual slavery in its military brothels during WW2. This came after Korean and broader international criticism of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe over his comments that there was no evidence that women were coerced into working at WW2 brothels for Japanese troops. Although Abe had subsequently backtracked and backed the 1993 apology (statement appended below), it was often viewed as lip-service to smooth over cracks in Japan’s relations with not only China and Korea, but now the US.

“I am apologizing here and now as the prime minister, as it is stated in the Kono statement… As I frequently say, I feel sympathy for the people who underwent hardships, and I apologize for the fact that they were placed in this situation at the time.”

Abe is scheduled to visit the US in April, with the US Congress scheduled to pass on a non-binding resolution proposed by Democrat Representative Mike Honda soon after. The resolution calls for Japan to formally acknowledge [and] apologize … in a clear and unequivocal manner for its imperial armed forces’ coercion of young women into sexual slavery.” Abe has already denounced the resolution as being riddled with errors and said he would offer no new apologies even if it passes.

Japan’s war crimes have been well-documented, although these are never discussed in its textbooks for public schools. In particular, Japan’s use of “comfort women” in China and Korea remains a problem in its relations with those countries today. Apart from ignorance, the main contention by Japanese politicians and historians who argue that the Imperial Army did not coerce the women into sexual slavery stems from the claim that the comfort women had consented and/or were paid. There is also the claim that most of the comfort women were from Japan. However, studies have also indicated that as many as 200,000 local women in conquered lands were forced into sexual slavery.

Yasuji Kaneko, 87, told AP in an interview that “They cried out, but it didn’t matter to us whether the women lived or died. We were the emperor’s soldiers. Whether in military brothels or in the villages, we raped without reluctance.”

Sickity

Been feeling pretty sick lately. The weather here in Tokyo is flopping between summer and winter a bit too randomly. Will it be hot or will it snow? I’m with a hundred or so different people every week so the transmission possibilities are endless. The medicine has congealed my phlegm into what looks to be a Japanese dessert … or is that the hazy thought inducing medicine talking? The sore throat and headache doesn’t look like anything edible, but perhaps I’m not as culinarily creative as the natives.

Apple has some new commercials out and I thought the one on how things change was pretty nifty. Also of some hilarity was the vista security one.