Poignant Memories
One Monday
morning in 1995 Kazumashita Takahashi , an assistant station master on the
Chiyodu Subway line in central Tokyo, was on duty when the 8:10 train pulled in.
Many of the passengers were civil servants, whose offices were in the nearby
Kasumigaseki government district next to the Imperial palace.
Before the
doors slammed shut Takahashi noticed some liquid spilled on the train floor. He
mopped it up and waved the train on. Shortly after he collapsed on the platform
and died. Within minutes commuters were staggering out of the subway exits
gasping for breath, coughing, rubbing their eyes and foaming at the mouth.
Urban
terrorists had planted sarin nerve gas at five widely scattered locations along
three downtown subway lines in what must have surly been the world’s first use
of a weapon of mass destruction delivered in a waste basket.
This year
Japan will be commemorating and contemplating meanings about several poignant
anniversaries. In addition to the 20th anniversary on March 20 for
the sarin nerve gas attack in the Tokyo subway system, there is the 20th
anniversary, just past, on the Kobe earthquake.
Looking
further beyond is the 70th anniversary of Japan’s surrender at the
end of World War II. Even though the date, August 15, is months away, much
speculation is building in Japan as to what the conservative prime minister,
Shinzo Abe will say on that occasion.
The
earthquake that struck Kobe early on the morning of January 17 was the most
severe quake to hit Japan between the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923 and the
Great East Japan Earthquake of 2011. Some 6,434 people died in the Kobe quake.
The
magnitude 7.3 quake shattered the safety myth of urban life in modern-day Japan.
The collapse of elevated expressways, which became the iconic symbol of the disaster,
and fires that burned down whole neighborhoods underscored the vulnerability of
the country to natural disasters.
The more
recent March 11, 2011, Great East Japan quake was even bigger and deadlier, but
most of the victims drowned to the tsunami that followed the quake, where as
most of the victims of the Kobe quake were crushed in collapsing houses and buildings.
Kobe did
not regain its pre-quake population until 2004, and today about 44 percent of
the population now has no first-hand experience with the event, underscoring
the need to keep knowledge and memories of the disaster alive.
It is hard
to forget the nerve gas attack in Tokyo, when, 20 year after the event, there are
still accountings to be settled. The trial opened January 16 for one of the alleged
members of the Aum Shinrikyo doomsday cult that perpetrated the terror attack.
Katsuya
Takahashi, now 56, went on trial for murder and several other crimes relating
to the cult’s nefarious activities. A fugitive for 17 years after the attack,
Takahashi was finally apprehended in June 2012. His trial is expected to last
for four months with a verdict announced in April. He has pleaded not guilty.
If the
trial progresses along this timetable, it will seems like the speed of light
compared with the trial of the cult’s mysterious leader Shoko Asahara. He was
convicted and sentenced to death after a trial that lasted nine years.
Asahara is
still alive and awaiting execution, which in Japan, are never announced in advance.
He will know he has met his date with the hang man only the morning when it
actually happens. During his lengthy trial, Asahara never spoke out or offered
any kind of excuse or reason for his cult’s bizarre attacks.
Of course,
the most eagerly anticipated anniversary of 2015 will be the 70th
year following Japan’s surrender in August, 15, 1945. This would be a pregnant
date under any circumstances, but it is all the more interesting in that all
will be curious to see how Abe handles the event and what he says in the
inevitable anniversary declaration.
Abe is
known to question the veracity many of the war crimes that Japan has been
accused of fomenting during its invasion of China. Indeed, he has even questioned
whether “aggression” is the correct term to describe Japan’s actions.
However,
he is also the leader of Japan and responsible for Tokyo’s diplomacy abroad, so
he will have to suppress many of these private convictions in order not to stir
more trouble with nearby neighbors, China and South Korea. Properly phrased it
might even help to alleviate some of these tensions.
Naturally,
his government, including Abe himself has been eager to put a positive spin on
the event, saying he hoped that any statement would be foreword looking as well as expressing remorse for
Japan’s actions in World War II.
“I would
like to write Japan’s remorse on the war, its post-war history as a pacifist
nation and how [Japan] will contribute to the Asia Pacific region and the
world,” Abe said in his first press conference of the new year. “We hope Japan
can match its words with actions, honestly facing up to its history.” countered
a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman.
Abe’s
statement will be even more closely scrutinized than the one issued by former
prime minister Tomiichi Murayama in 1995 to mark the 50th
anniversary of the close of the war. The premier admitted in that statement
that Japan bore responsibility for wartime atrocities and for it colonization
of Korea. It has been viewed ever since as an unambiguous, formal apology.
However
many on the far right in Japan believe that Murayama’s statement went too far.
That it was issued by the only socialist prime minister Japan has had since the
days right after the war, adds to their contempt for the statement and their
probably unrealistic hope that Abe might actually retract part of it.
That is
certainly not in the cards as coming from a premier who, though personally
something of a historical revisionist, is also keen on restoring Japan’s relationships
with its near Asian neighbors.
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