Thursday, July 27, 2006

More Unknown War History

War Crimes Museum

Further evidence of the dubious nature of the Japanese role during their occupation of parts of China in the 1930s and 40s is highlighted here in Harbin.
The Japanese army took the city in 1932, part of the colonization policy that had already claimed Korea and other parts of the newly set up Manchukuo state (Manchuria) with its puppet emperor.
Many Japanese historians even today refute much of the evidence that has been mounting up since the war years, although it is now fairly commonly accepted that the strictly drilled Japanese forces and seemingly polite civilians were less than civil.
The Japanese Germ Warfare Experimental Base (Riben xijun shiyan jidi) was set up in 1939 to "research", presumably, the capabilities of the soul and the endurance of the human body. Run by the Japanese army's Unit 731 (Qi san yao budui), the research center experimented upon many of the captives of the viscous war in Northeast Asia, including Soviet, Korean, British, Mongolian and mostly Chinese prisoners of war (POWs). As with other examples of the demonic brutality that such oppressive authoritarian societies can be stretched to doing, from Auschwitz to Nanjing, the Germ Warfare Experimental Base nowadays shows little of the grisly senselessness that its recent past should emphasize. The sight is said to have witnessed the execution of over 3000 POWs in the most horrific way: frozen, bombed, roasted, infected, injected, dissected...alive until dead.
Almost as chilling and sad as the events themselves is the umbrella of denial that now has spread over much of this period of history, with allegations and misinformation coming from many sides. Just before the 1945 retake of the city by the Soviets the Japanese apparently did their utmost to cover up the evidence of this area, blowing up the site. Allegedly, the Americans also gave the Japanese scientists who worked in the base, prominent in their respective fields, immunity from prosecution in return for research findings. It was not until the 1980s that a Japanese journalist published his findings of the role of the army in the Northeast that, seemingly, the whole truth came out. Nowadays many Chinese are adamant, and with good but possibly overzealous reasons, in their hatred of the Japanese. "Is said to", "apparently", "allegedly", "seemingly", "possibly" are words that appear with frequent maddening regularity here.
The museum that now commemorates this site is situated near to the spot that the original base stood, some 30km south-west of Harbin, near to the little town of Pingfang. The site is interesting for those into history, although the museum is small (two rooms) and has, see above, little evidence of the true past. There are, however, a few photographs, with Chinese captions, and the unearthed site of the original base that could be worth a look.
Nanking(Nanjing) www.historyplace.com
In December of 1937, the Japanese Imperial Army marched into China's capital city of Nanking and proceeded to murder 300,000 out of 600,000 civilians and soldiers in the city. The six weeks of carnage would become known as the Rape of Nanking and represented the single worst atrocity during the World War II era in either the European or Pacific theaters of war.
The actual military invasion of Nanking was preceded by a tough battle at Shanghai that began in the summer of 1937. Chinese forces there put up surprisingly stiff resistance against the Japanese Army which had expected an easy victory in China. The Japanese had even bragged they would conquer all of China in just three months. The stubborn resistance by the Chinese troops upset that timetable, with the battle dragging on through the summer into late fall. This infuriated the Japanese and whetted their appetite for the revenge that was to follow at Nanking.
After finally defeating the Chinese at Shanghai in November, 50,000 Japanese soldiers then marched on toward Nanking. Unlike the troops at Shanghai, Chinese soldiers at Nanking were poorly led and loosely organized. Although they greatly outnumbered the Japanese and had plenty of ammunition, they withered under the ferocity of the Japanese attack, then engaged in a chaotic retreat. After just four days of fighting, Japanese troops smashed into the city on December 13, 1937, with orders issued to "kill all captives."
Their first concern was to eliminate any threat from the 90,000 Chinese soldiers who surrendered. To the Japanese, surrender was an unthinkable act of cowardice and the ultimate violation of the rigid code of military honor drilled into them from childhood onward. Thus they looked upon Chinese POWs with utter contempt, viewing them as less than human, unworthy of life.
The elimination of the Chinese POWs began after they were transported by trucks to remote locations on the outskirts of Nanking. As soon as they were assembled, the savagery began, with young Japanese soldiers encouraged by their superiors to inflict maximum pain and suffering upon individual POWs as a way of toughening themselves up for future battles, and also to eradicate any civilized notions of mercy. Filmed footage and still photographs taken by the Japanese themselves document the brutality. Smiling soldiers can be seen conducting bayonet practice on live prisoners, decapitating them and displaying severed heads as souvenirs, and proudly standing among mutilated corpses. Some of the Chinese POWs were simply mowed down by machine-gun fire while others were tied-up, soaked with gasoline and burned alive.
After the destruction of the POWs, the soldiers turned their attention to the women of Nanking and an outright animalistic hunt ensued. Old women over the age of 70 as well as little girls under the age of 8 were dragged off to be sexually abused. More than 20,000 females (with some estimates as high as 80,000) were gang-raped by Japanese soldiers, then stabbed to death with bayonets or shot so they could never bear witness.
Pregnant women were not spared. In several instances, they were raped, then had their bellies slit open and the fetuses torn out. Sometimes, after storming into a house and encountering a whole family, the Japanese forced Chinese men to rape their own daughters, sons to rape their mothers, and brothers their sisters, while the rest of the family was made to watch.
Throughout the city of Nanking, random acts of murder occurred as soldiers frequently fired their rifles into panicked crowds of civilians, killing indiscriminately. Other soldiers killed shopkeepers, looted their stores, then set the buildings on fire after locking people of all ages inside. They took pleasure in the extraordinary suffering that ensued as the people desperately tried to escape the flames by climbing onto rooftops or leaping down onto the street.
The incredible carnage - citywide burnings, stabbings, drownings, strangulations, rapes, thefts, and massive property destruction - continued unabated for about six weeks, from mid-December 1937 through the beginning of February 1938. Young or old, male or female, anyone could be shot on a whim by any Japanese soldier for any reason. Corpses could be seen everywhere throughout the city. The streets of Nanking were said to literally have run red with blood.
Those who were not killed on the spot were taken to the outskirts of the city and forced to dig their own graves, large rectangular pits that would be filled with decapitated corpses resulting from killing contests the Japanese held among themselves. Other times, the Japanese forced the Chinese to bury each other alive in the dirt.
After this period of unprecedented violence, the Japanese eased off somewhat and settled in for the duration of the war. To pacify the population during the long occupation, highly addictive narcotics, including opium and heroin, were distributed by Japanese soldiers to the people of Nanking, regardless of age. An estimated 50,000 persons became addicted to heroin while many others lost themselves in the city's opium dens.
In addition, the notorious Comfort Women system was introduced which forced young Chinese women to become slave-prostitutes, existing solely for the sexual pleasure of Japanese soldiers.
News reports of the happenings in Nanking appeared in the official Japanese press and also in the West, as page-one reports in newspapers such as the New York Times. Japanese news reports reflected the militaristic mood of the country in which any victory by the Imperial Army resulting in further expansion of the Japanese empire was celebrated. Eyewitness reports by Japanese military correspondents concerning the sufferings of the people of Nanking also appeared. They reflected a mentality in which the brutal dominance of subjugated or so-called inferior peoples was considered just. Incredibly, one paper, the Japan Advertiser, actually published a running count of the heads severed by two officers involved in a decapitation contest, as if it was some kind of a sporting match.
In the United States, reports published in the New York Times, Reader's Digest and Time Magazine, were greeted with skepticism from the American public. The stories smuggled out of Nanking seemed almost too fantastic to be believed.
Overall, most Americans had only a passing knowledge or little interest in Asia. Political leaders in both America and Britain remained overwhelmingly focused on the situation in Europe where Adolf Hitler was rapidly re-arming Germany while at the same time expanding the borders of the Nazi Reich through devious political maneuvers.
Back in Nanking, however, all was not lost. An extraordinary group of about 20 Americans and Europeans remaining in the city, composed of missionaries, doctors and businessmen, took it upon themselves to establish an International Safety Zone. Using Red Cross flags, they brazenly declared a 2.5 square-mile area in the middle of the city off limits to the Japanese. On numerous occasions, they also risked their lives by personally intervening to prevent the execution of Chinese men or the rape of women and young girls.
These Westerners became the unsung heroes of Nanking, working day and night to the point of exhaustion to aid the Chinese. They also wrote down their impressions of the daily scenes they witnessed, with one describing Nanking as "hell on earth." Another wrote of the Japanese soldiers: "I did not imagine that such cruel people existed in the modern world." About 300,000 Chinese civilians took refuge inside their Safety Zone. Almost all of the people who did not make it into the Zone during the Rape of Nanking ultimately perished.

Lesson on Unknown History



During my course preparing high school students to go to take an entrance exam, I was made aware of their anti-Japanese feelings during our goodbye lunch celebrations. I had to to a bit of digging to see what this was based on. Here is some background material.
War Lives On at Museum of the Macabre (Washington Post 2006)
HARBIN, China -- More than 200,000 Chinese filed through the remains of Japan's notorious Unit 731 here last year, visiting the ghosts of World War II. In exhibits mounted throughout the bleak headquarters building, they saw wrenching descriptions of biological warfare experiments carried out on thousands of Chinese prisoners from 1939 to 1945.
The phrase "Do not forget us" has been inscribed on the wall of one room, where visitors can see the names and photos of some of those who received botulism injections, were made to suffer frostbite or had their internal organs removed by Japanese military doctors.
Heeding those words, authorities have drawn up plans for a $62.5 million expansion of the museum, condemning a middle school and an apartment complex to make way for restoring the once top-secret facility, where researchers estimate 3,000 Chinese were killed and 300,000 sickened by the hideous wartime experiments. The aim, said curator Wang Peng, is to make the story of Japan's atrocities at Unit 731 known to an ever-wider audience.
"Our goal is to build it into a world-class war memorial and educate people all over the world," Wang said in an interview. "This is not just a Chinese concern. It is a concern of humanity."
The intensifying interest in abuses at Unit 731, on the plains of Manchuria about 650 miles northeast of Beijing, is part of a rising tide of Chinese resentment over Japan's conduct during its extended occupation of China. The resentment, long simmering in the population, has been stoked in the past several years by what Chinese officials and people contend is a refusal by Japanese leaders to acknowledge clearly what happened and seek forgiveness from the victims and their relatives.
The popular anti-Japanese sentiment, mirrored in government-controlled media, has become a key ingredient in an increasingly tense relationship between China and Japan. Although they remain valuable trading partners, Asia's two major powers gradually have slipped into the role of adversaries, with officials regularly trading accusations of bad faith and Japanese leaders explicitly calling China a security threat.

Monday, July 17, 2006

Harbin Beer
















Harbin Beer

Apparently Harbin beer is famous-too bad I don’t drink. Here on Zhong Yang Da Jie (main street) some remodeling has been completed for the coming beer festival. The main street is supposed to be one of the longest pedestrian walkways in China and its very conveniently up the street from where I live.

“Bu Lat!”
Bu Lat! Is a key phrase if you don’t want your mouth burned off when ordering food in restaurants. I’ve tried a few of the market dishes and most were quite spicy.

Russian GoodsThere are quite a few stores selling Russian goods here. Also I’ve managed to spot some Russian tourists. Also surprising is that there are quite a lot of Chinese tourists to Harbin.


Night Entertainment at Euro Plaza

There has been regular performance action at the Euro Plaza which is up the street from my place. There is a Korean food festival but there is also a curious lack of Korean food!Yes there are some feeble displays around the stage but not the big ‘festival’ the big sign implies.

Blog for July 12

Singapore Corrections

Thanks for some corrections from Mr. Hugh Brodie on Singapore, who mentions that 1) When I (Hugh) was there - it seemed that every (most?) public toilet was"auto-flush". Maybe there is a law stating that no new public toiletscan be "manual"?2) As far as I know, possessing gum (at least for personal use) was/isprefectly legal.3) I was told by locals that jaywalking is permitted if there is no"legal" pedestrian crossing within 100 m. I just followed the crowds andcrossed "illegally" quite often.4) Most/all elevators are equipped with a device to detect urine.Apparently, there was a problem with people urinating in elevators, andaction is taken against offenders.

Friday, July 07, 2006

SINGAPORE LAW


I am teaching a group of students who will be taking an exam to earn a scholarship to study in Singapore. Here is a bit more info on the destination. Some of the things I learned are quite surprising!

Fines
Fines are a defining element of life in Singapore. Some of the fines are for offenses that international travelers might expect, such as littering or jaywalking. First-time offenders can be fined S$500 or more.

It is illegal to use a toilet in Singapore and then not flush it. You will also be given a fine if you are caught spitting. The sale, importation and possession of chewing gum is banned and subject to heavy fines. First-time offenders can be fined S$1,000 and repeat-offenders are fined S$2,000 and given corrective work, such as cleaning a public place. The offenders are made to wear bright jackets, and sometimes, media are invited to cover the spectacle. This rule was introduced because of the high cost and difficulty in removing chewing gum from public premises.

Other items that cannot be brought into the country without authorization from the government include bullet-proof clothing, toy guns, pistols, weapons, or spears. Chewing tobacco, toy currency, and obscene materials are strictly prohibited.

No Smoking!
Smoking is not allowed in public buses, taxis, lifts, theaters, cinemas, government offices, and in air-conditioned restaurants and shopping centers. First-time offenders face a maximum fine of S$1,000. Where smoking is allowed, smokers must make sure they put out their cigarette butts in the proper place. Flicking a cigarette butt on the ground could easily get a smoker fined for littering. Eating or drinking is also prohibited in Mass Rapid Transit trains and terminals. It carries a minimum fine of S$500.

All laws involving traffic rules, vehicle registration, and liability in case of accident are strictly enforced and may have criminal penalties. Laws against driving while using a cellular phone are very strictly enforced. First-time offenders can be fined up to S$10,000.

Rule of Thumb
A good rule of thumb to use in Singapore is if an activity is prohibited by a rule, guideline, or norm elsewhere, it is quite likely prohibited by law in Singapore.

Felonies
Laws pertaining to felonies in Singapore are also very tough and strictly enforced. For example, there is a mandatory caning sentence for vandalism offenses. Caning can also be imposed for immigration violations and other offenses. Caning is a mandatory part of the sentence for rape and many drug-trafficking offenses.

Drug Trafficking
A person trafficking a Class-A drug, such as heroin, receives a minimum punishment of 5-years imprisonment and 5 strokes of the cane. A person trafficking a Class-B drug, cannabis, for instance, receives a minimum punishment of 3-years imprisonment and 3 strokes of the cane.

Persons caught trafficking larger amounts of narcotics are handled with an even more severe punishment. A mandatory death penalty was introduced in 1975 for persons convicted of trafficking in more than 15 grams of heroin or more than 30 grams of morphine. The death penalty is also mandated for trafficking 30 grams of cocaine, 500 grams of cannabis, 200 grams of cannabis resin, or 1.2 kilograms of opium. If you possess these quantities, you are deemed to be a trafficker and therefore subject to the death penalty.

Harsh Rehabilitation
Laws are strict. People who get caught with small amounts of drugs are sentenced to harsh rehabilitation programs. Rehabilitation is a method of punishment, not a method of curing a medical problem.

Conditions during rehabilitation range from rough to severe. Those determined to be physically able to handle it are detoxified with the "cold turkey" method. The detoxification by "cold turkey" treatment was adopted as it was felt that the traumatic experience of "cold turkey" or detoxification would serve as a deterrent to ex-drug-takers going back to drugs.

Conclusion
Singapore attracts many tourists. The clean and safe city is a haven in the midst of a region governed by shaky regimes and corrupt police forces. The mass transit system runs efficiently and is immaculately clean. Public parks and private gardens are well maintained. Malls, streets, and beaches are free from litter. Crime rates are very low.

My Singapore Scholarship Preparation Class


Here are some of my students on a break.

My school has two campuses, one in Daoli district and one in Nangang. The preparation course is in Nangang.
The school tries to take good care of us and has a cook to make lunches for us. Mostly its rice and pickled vegetables and then something that could be delicious or the more normal salted beans or cold eggplant.

My Three Student Judges


Friday we had interview practice where each student gave a short talk on why they should get a scholarship to go to Singapore.

I had three student judges to help me who were elected by the class as the best speakers so far. They did an excellent job giving feedback to my group. Unfortunately, some of my students decided that they did not need/want to practice and their interviews went badly.
We have a POSC (Period of Self-Criticism) where each person says what they will do better the next time. Next practice interview time is next Friday.

Typical Outdoor Entertainment on Zhong Zhang Da Jie (Main St)


On my way to work I go along main street which is a main tourist spot and hangout for the locals. There is a lot of free entertainment and one day at the outdoor market spot there was a local rock band. Rock has a rather different sound in Mandarin!

Here the band was playing at one of my eating spots where I have to just point at something and hope its edible. One time I got a dish of cold noodles which seemed harmless enough but it was so spicy my mouth felt like it was on fire.

One of the other foreign teachers told me that there will be a two week beer festival coming soon. Too bad I don’t drink! At one of the supermarkets near my place a can of Chinese beer is around C$0.30/can

Thursday, July 06, 2006

Ouch It's Hot Today-July 6

Well I thought it was quite warm! Today's high was 35C and tomorrow's high will be 37C according to BBC weather forecast. The little kids in my class just keep the same enthusiastic looks on their faces as their wimpy foreign teacher wilts under the intense local heat. I don't even know if it's a heat wave or just the normal weather.
My solution is just to bring lots of water bottles to class and then go to the nearest store for a fresh cold pop whenever I get the chance. What can I say, there is no cool ocean breeze as in Vancouver. Well at least it rains once in a while here.
Its quite hard to sleep at night too.

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Getting Sick in China- July 4

Well it had to happen sooner or later, I got sick. Somehow, I managed to catch a cold when the weather has been steaming hot for a few days in a row. My throat was very sore and I was on the verge of losing my voice. This would be a disaster for my teaching debut.

One of my teaching assistants went to buy some medicine for me. Some bitter tasting liquid and a couple of types of pills and capsules quickly appeared. The pills/capsules seem rather ordinary, but no words can describe the foul taste of the liquid potion.

My symptoms quickly disappeared after a day. Whew!

Chinese Takeout Food-China Style-July 3

I went out for a late lunch snack for some takeout food at a small local restaurant today. Well what could possibly be so interesting about this you may wonder? My food was nicely wrapped in two small plastic bags!

The spicy beef noodles were very tasty. You can’t judge the food by the container it seems.