A once-reserved
country fuels itself on indignation and catharsis
by Toshio Nishi
Japan has been
apologizing since the summer of 1945; apologizing to its neighbors in the
Asia-Pacific and to the United States. Have we, the Japanese, been kowtowing to
the point that no nation believes our sincerity? Or do the Asia-Pacific nations
demand more of our prostration? The scene is perhaps like an addict needing a
more potent drug every passing day: the drug being Japan’s apology, and the
addict you could easily guess.
Don’t the
Japanese get sick and tired of our same miserable behavior? Yes, we do. Indeed,
a proverbial swing has moved a little toward the center, and Japan has become
assertive and recently proclaimed ownership for some little rocks sticking out
of the water in the Sea of Japan.
China and South
Korea are shocked to see Japan’s unexpected nationalistic, neo-militaristic
resurgence. The United States wisely stays out of this potentially volatile
shouting match. There is a very good reason for unfriendly bickering. Below the
rocks, under the seabed, huge oil and natural gas deposits have been
discovered.
MacArthur’s
Legacy
Something is
going on under the surface of a polite Japanese society that previously enjoyed
unprecedented wealth and now is suffering from two decades of recession (but is
still without much crime). Granted, the largest earthquake and tsunami in our
memory and the four nuclear meltdowns never before experienced in our history
have wrecked our daily lives. Yet, on its surface, Japan remains calm and
collected. The people’s indignation, however, is heating up within.
Through our
recent history, we have learned victory in war lasts only a moment, and the
misery of defeat remains for a lifetime. Born in Osaka five days after Pearl
Harbor, I grew up in the terrible aftermath of Japan’s first, crushing defeat.
Like all other children who survived it, I know hunger and poverty, and the
burden of the defeat.