The Man Who Ended History: A Documentary

Home > Other > The Man Who Ended History: A Documentary > Page 5
The Man Who Ended History: A Documentary Page 5

by Ken Liu


  and it is not just the Japanese government . Individual Japanese citizens

  have done heroic work in bringing these atrocities to light throughout

  the years, almost always against government resistance and against the

  public's wish to forget a nd move on . And I offer them my heartfelt

  thanks .

  The truth cannot be brushed away, and the families of the victims

  and the people of China should not be told that justice is not possible,

  that because their present government is repugnant to the government

  of the United States, that a great injustice should be covered up and

  hidden from the judgment of the world . Is there any doubt that this

  non- binding Resolution, or even much more stringent versions of it,

  would have passed without trouble if the victims were a people whose

  government has the favor of the United States? If we, for “ strategic”

  reasons, sacrifice the truth in the name of gaining something of value

  for short - term advantage, then we will have simply repeated the errors

  of our forefathers at the end of the War.

  It is not who we are. Dr. Wei has offered us a way to speak the

  truth about the past, and we must ask the government of Japan and

  our government to stand up and take up our collective responsibility to

  history .

  When I was finishing my doctorate in Boston, Evan and Akemi

  often had my wife and me over to their place. They were very friendly

  and helpful, and made us feel the enthusiasm and warmth that

  America is rightly famous for. Unlike many Chinese Americans I met,

  Evan did not give off a sense that he felt he was superior to the Chinese

  from the mainland . It was wonderful to have him and Akemi as life -long friends, and not have every interaction between us filtered

  through the lens of the politics between our two countries, as is so

  often the case between Chinese and American scholars.

  Li Ruming, Director of the Department of History, Zhejiang University,

  The People's Republic of China:

  Because I am his friend and I am also Chinese, it is difficult for me

  to speak about Evan's work with objectivity, but I will try my best.

  When Evan first announced his intention to go to Harbin and try

  to travel to the past, the Chinese government was cautiously

  supportive. As none of it had been tried before, the full implications of

  Evan's destructive process for time travel were not yet clear. Due to

  destruction of evidence at the end of the War and continuing

  stonewalling by the Japanese government, we do not have access to

  large archives of documentary evidence and artifacts from Unit 731,

  and i t was felt that Evan's work would help fill in the gap by providing

  first - hand accounts of what happened . The Chinese government

  granted Evan and Akemi visas under the assumption that their work

  would help promote Western understanding of China's historica l

  disputes with Japan.

  But they wanted to monitor his work. The War is deeply

  emotional for my compatriots, its unhealed wounds exacerbated by

  years of post- War disputes with Japan, and as such, it was not

  politically feasible for the government to not be involved. World War

  Two was not the distant past, involving ancient peoples, and China

  could not permit two foreigners to go traipsing through that recent

  history like adventurers through ancient tombs.

  But from Evan's point of view—and I think he was just ified in his

  belief—any support, monitoring, or affiliation with the Chinese

  government would have destroyed all credibility for his work in

  Western eyes.

  He thus rejected all offers of Chinese involvement and even called

  for intervention by American dip lomats . This angered many Chinese

  and alienated him from them . Later, when the Chinese government

  finally shut down his work after the storm of negative publicity, very

  few Chinese would speak up for him because they felt that he and

  Akemi had—perhaps even intentionally —done more damage to

  China's history and her people . The accusations were unfair, and I'm

  sorry to say that I do not feel that I did enough to defend his

  reputation.

  Evan's focus throughout his project was both more universal and

  more atomistic than the people of China . On the one hand, he had an

  American devotion to the idea of the individual, and his commitment

  was first and foremost to the individual voice and memory of each

  victim. On the other hand, he was also trying to transcend nations , to

  make people all over the world empathize with these victims, condemn

  their torturers, and affirm the common humanity of us all .

  But in that process, he was forced to distance his effort from the

  Chinese people in order to preserve the political credibility of his

  project in the West . He sacrificed their goodwill in a bid to make the

  West care. Evan tried to appease the West and Western prejudices

  against China . Was it cowardly? Should he have challenged them

  more? I do not know.

  History is not merely a private matter . Even the family members of

  the victims understand that there is a communitarian aspect to history .

  The War of Resistance Against the Japanese Invasion is the founding

  story of modern China, much as the Holocaust is the founding story of

  Israel and the Revolution and the Civil War are the founding stories of

  America. Perhaps this is difficult to understand for a Westerner, but

  to many Chinese, Evan, because he feared and rejected their

  involvement, was stealing and erasing their history . He sacrificed the

  history of the Chinese people, without their consent, for a Western

  ideal . I understand why he did it, but I cannot agree that his choice

  was right.

  As a Chinese, I do not share Evan's utter devotion to the idea of a

  personalized sense of history . Telling the individual stories of all the

  victims, as Evan sought to do, is not possible and in any event would

  not solve all problems.

  Because of our limited capacity for empathy for mass suffering, I

  think there's a risk that his approach would result in sentimentality

  and only selective memory. More than sixteen million civilians died in

  China from the Japanese invasion . The great bulk of this suffering did

  not occur in death factories like Pingfang or killing fields like Nanjing,

  which grab headlines and shout for our attention; rather, it occurred in

  the countless quiet villages, towns, remote outposts, where men and

  women were slaughtered and raped and slaughtered again, their

  screams fading with the chill wind, until even their names becam e

  blanks and forgotten . But they also deserve to be remembered.

  It is not possible that every atrocity would find a spokesperson as

  eloquent as Anne Frank, and I do not believe that we should seek to

  reduce all of history to a collection of such narratives .

  But Evan always told me that an American would rather work on

  the problem that he could solve rather than wring his hands over the

  vast realm of problems that he could not.

  It was not an easy choice that he made, and I would not have

 
; chosen the same way . But Evan was always true to his American ideals.

  It has often been said that since everybody in China knew about

  Unit 731, Dr. Wei had nothing useful to teach the Chinese, and was

  only an activist campaigning against Japan. That's not quite right. One

  of the more tragic aspects of the dispute between China and Japan over

  history is how much their responses have mirrored each other. Wei’s

  goal was to rescue history from both.

  Bill Pacer, Professor of Modern Chinese Language and Culture, University

  of Hawaii at Manoa:

  In the early days of the People's Republic, between 1945 and 1956,

  the Communists' overall ideological approach was to treat the Japanese

  invasion as just another historical stage in mankind's unstoppable

  march towards socialism. While Japanese militarism was condemned

  and the Resistance celebrated, the Communists also sought to forgive

  the Japanese individually if they showed contrition —a surprisingly

  Christian/Confucian approach for an atheistic regime. In this

  atmosphere of revolutionary zeal, the Japanese prisoners were treated,

  for the most part, humanely . They were given Marxist classes and told

  to write confessions of their crimes. (These classes became the basis for

  the Japanese public’s belief that any man who would confess to

  horrible c rimes during the War must have been brainwashed by the

  Communists.) Once they were deemed sufficiently reformed through

  “ re - education, ” they were released back to Japan. Memories of the War

  were then suppressed in China as the country feverishly moved to

  build a Socialist utopia, with well - known disastrous consequences.

  Yet, this generosity towards the Japanese was matched by Stalinist

  harsh treatment of landowners, capitalists, intellectuals, and the

  Chinese who collaborated with the Japanese. Hundreds of thousands

  of people were killed, often on little evidence and with no effort given

  to observe legal forms.

  Later, during the 1990s, the government of the People’s Republic

  began to invoke memories of the War in the context of patriotism to

  legitimize its elf in the wake of the collapse of Communism . Ironically,

  this obvious ploy prevented large segments of the populace from being

  able to come to terms with the War—distrust of the government

  infected everything it touched.

  And so the People's Republic's approach to historical memory

  created a series of connected problems . First, the leniency they showed

  the prisoners became the ground for denialists to later question the

  veracity of confessions by Japanese soldiers . Second, yoking patriotism

  to the memory of the War invited charges that any effort to remember

  was politically motivated. And lastly, individual victims of the

  atrocities became symbols, anonymized to serve the needs of the State.

  However, it has rarely been acknowledged that behind Japan's

  post- War silence regarding wartime atrocities lay the same impulses

  that drove the Chinese responses. On the left, the peace movement

  attributed all suffering during the War to the concept of war itself, and

  advocated universal forgiveness and peace among all nations without a

  sense of blame . In the center, focus was placed on material

  development as a bandage to cover the wounds of the War . On the

  right, the question of wartime guilt became inextricably yoked to

  patriotism . In contrast to Germany, which could rely on Nazism—

  distinct from the nation itself—to absorb the blame, it was impossible

  to acknowledge the atrocities committed by the Japanese during the

  War without implicating a sense that Japan itself was under attack.

  And so, across a narrow sea, China and Japan unwittingly

  converged on the same set of responses to the barbarities of World

  War Two: forgetting in the name of universal ideals like “ peace” and

  “ socialism ” ; welding memories of the War to patriotism; abstracting

  victims and perpetrators alike into symbols to serve the State . Seen in

  this light, the abstract, incomplete, fragmentary memories in China

  and the silence in Japan are flip sides of the same coin.

  The core of Wei's belief is that without real memory, there can be

  no real reconciliation. Without real memory, the individual persons of

  each nation have not been able to empathize with and remember and

  experience the suffering of the victims. An individualized story that

  each of us can tell ourselves about what happened is required before we

  can move beyond the trap of history. That, all along, was what Wei's

  project was about.

  “ Cross- Talk,” January 21, 20XX, courtesy of FXNN

  Amy Rowe

  Ambassador Yoshida, let's start with you. Why won't Japan

  apologize?

  : Thank you, Ambassador Yoshida and Dr. Wei, for

  agreeing to come on to Cross- Talk tonight . Our viewers want to have

  their questions answered, and I want to see some fireworks!

  Yoshida

  This is from a statement by Prime Minister Tomiichi Murayama,

  on August 31, 1994 . “ Japan's actions in a certain period of the past not

  only claimed numerous victims here in Japan but also left the peoples

  of neighboring Asia and elsewhere with scars that are painful even

  today. I am thus taking this opportunity to state my belief, based on

  my profound remorse for these acts of aggression, colonial rule, and

  the like caused such unbearable suffering and sorrow for so many

  people, that Japan's future path should be one of making every effort to

  build world peace in line with my no - war commitment. It is imperative

  for us Japanese to look squarely to our history with the peoples of

  neighboring Asia and elsewhere.”

  : Amy, Japan has apologized. This is the whole point.

  Japan has apologized many many times for W orld War Two . Every

  few years we have to go through this spectacle where it's said that

  Japan needs to apologize for its actions during World War Two. But

  Japan has done so, repeatedly. Let me read you a few quotes.

  And again, from a statement by the Diet, on June 9, 1995: “ On the

  occasion of the 50th anniversary of the end of World War II, this

  House offers its sincere condolences to those who fell in action and

  victims of wars and similar actions all over the world . Solemnly

  reflecting upon many instances of colonial rule and acts of aggression

  in the modern history of the world, and recognizing that Japan carried

  out those acts in the past, inflicting pain and suffering upon the

  peoples of other countries, especially in Asia, the Members of this

  House express a sense of deep remorse. ”

  I can go on and r ead you dozens of other quotes like this. Japan has

  apologized, Amy .

  Yet, every few years, the propaganda organs of certain regimes

  hostile to a free and prosperous Japan try to dredge up settled

  historical events to manufacture controversy. When is this going to

  end? And some men of otherwise good intellect have allowed

  themselves to become the tools of propaganda . I wish they would wake

  up and see how they are being used.

  R
owe: Dr. Wei, I have to say, those do sound like apologies to me.

  Wei

  But since Ambassador Yoshida has decided to bring up the issue

  of apologies, let's look closer at them, shall we?

  : Amy, it is not my aim or goal to humiliate Japan . My

  commitment is to the victims and their memory, not theatre. What

  I'm asking for is for Japan to acknowledge the truth of what happened

  at Pingfang . I want to focus on specifics, and acknowledgment of

  specifi cs, not empty platitudes.

  The statements quoted by the Ambassador are grand and abstract,

  and they refer to vague and unspecified sufferings. They are apologies

  only in the most watered - down sense . What the Ambassador is not

  telling you is the Japanese government's continuing refusal to admit

  many specific war crimes and to honor and remember the real victims.

  Moreover, every time one of these statements quoted by the

  Ambassador is made, it is matched soon after by another statement

  from a prominent Japanese politician purporting to cast doubt upon

  what happened in World War Two . Year after year, we are treated to

  this show of the Japanese gover nment as a Janus speaking with two

  faces.

  Yoshida : It's not that unusual to have differences of opinion when

  it comes to matters of history, Dr. Wei . In a democracy it's what you

  would expect.

  Wei

  It wasn't until 2005, in response to a law suit by some relatives of

  Unit 731's victims for compensation, that the Tokyo High Court

  finally acknowledged Japan's use of biological weapons during the

  War. This was the first time that an official voice of the Japanese

  government admitted to that fact. Amy, you'll notice that this was a

  decade after those lofty statements read by Ambassador Yoshida. The

  Court denied compensation.

  : Actually, Ambassador, Unit 731 has been consistently

  handled by the Japanese government: for more than fifty years the

  official position was absolute silence regarding Unit 731, despite the

  steady accumulation of physical evidence, including human remains,

  from Unit 731's activities . Even the Unit's existence was not admitted

  until the 1990s, and the government consistently denied that it had

  researched or used biological weapons during the War.

  Since then the Japanese government has consistently stated that

 

‹ Prev