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Old 04-13-2005, 20:59 PM   #1 (permalink)
amit
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China Accuses Japan of Distorting History

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmp...flawed_history

By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN, Associated Press Writer

SHANGHAI, China - Some things you won't find in Chinese history textbooks: the 1989 democracy movement, the millions who died in a famine caused by misguided communist policies or China's military attacks on India and Vietnam.

Photo
AP Photo



As China criticizes Japan for new textbooks that critics say minimize wartime abuses like the Japanese military forcing Asian women into sexual slavery, Beijing's own schoolbooks have significant omissions about the communist system's own history and relations with its neighbors.

"With rising Chinese nationalism, the efforts to rewrite history, to reinterpret history according to the demands of nationalism have become a major national pastime," said Maochun Yu, a history professor at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md.

Experts say China's textbooks are written to heighten a sense of national victimhood and glorify the Communist Party that seized power in a 1949 revolution and lashes out at any threat to its rule.

The books describe those who died fighting Japan and other outsiders as having "gloriously sacrificed" themselves for China.

Propaganda paintings reproduced in schoolbooks show Chinese struggling against foreign invaders — poses imitated by protesters who threw rocks at the Japanese Embassy in Beijing over the weekend during violent anti-Japanese demonstrations in several Chinese cities.

An eighth-grade history book used in Shanghai, China's most cosmopolitan city, repeatedly refers to Japanese by an insulting phrase that roughly translates as "*** bandits."

The book focuses on Japanese atrocities and repeats China's claim that 35 million Chinese died or were injured during their 1937-45 war.

"Wherever the Japanese army went, they burned, killed, stole and plundered," the book says. "There was no wickedness they didn't commit."

Omissions of major events appear aimed at shoring up China's image of itself as a non-aggressor, especially since the 1949 revolution.

The books don't mention the brief but bloody 1962 border war with India that broke out when Chinese troops attacked Indian positions to enforce territorial claims.

There is nothing on the 1979 war when Chinese troops attacked Vietnam. The assault was ordered to punish Hanoi for ousting the murderous Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia, which was an ally of Beijing.

Also missing:

_The 1989 crackdown on democracy demonstrations, when Chinese troops killed hundreds and possibly thousands of unarmed protesters.

_The estimated 30 million Chinese who starved to death during the 1958-61 "Great Leap Forward," revolutionary leader Mao Zedong's attempt to speed up China's farm and factory output through mass collectivization.

Textbooks gloss over ally North Korea's invasion of South Korea at the start of the 1950-53 Korean War, a conflict that drew in troops from the United States and other countries on the side of the South and China's army in support of the North.

The texts say only that "civil war broke out," without mentioning how it started. America is portrayed as an invader that forced Beijing to intervene by threatening Chinese territory.



A seventh-grade text also accuses the U.S. military of using biological weapons during the Korean War, repeating a claim made by China, North Korea and the former Soviet Union during the Cold War but never proven.

While Japan's distortions of its history appear driven by a reluctance to accept shame, China's are aimed at preserving communist rule, said Sin-ming Shaw, a China scholar at Oxford University in England.

"Not owning up is a calculated political policy," Shaw said.

My Opinon: What hypocrisy. It's sad that the Chinese government lies to its own people. China doesn't have a positive history either, like Japan.
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Old 04-13-2005, 23:00 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Exactly.
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Old 04-13-2005, 23:08 PM   #3 (permalink)
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I for one have been stunned by the emotions that this issue has triggered. Especially given the fact that this was way back in the 1940's.
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Old 04-14-2005, 01:20 AM   #4 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by amit
My Opinon: What hypocrisy. It's sad that the Chinese government lies to its own people. China doesn't have a positive history either, like Japan.
First off, it's just not the Communists who are protesting but also Taipei, the Nationalist Chinese who were in power at the time of the massacres.

2nd, by all actual accounts, Beijing's version of what happenned at Tiannamen Square fits the known facts far more than the students (ie, the morges only collectted 700 bodies that day).
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Old 04-14-2005, 05:06 AM   #5 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Officer of Engineers
First off, it's just not the Communists who are protesting but also Taipei, the Nationalist Chinese who were in power at the time of the massacres.

2nd, by all actual accounts, Beijing's version of what happenned at Tiannamen Square fits the known facts far more than the students (ie, the morges only collectted 700 bodies that day).
Let this issue become a nosolvable one, a pretty ugly wish i know.but its beter that china have some good distraction up north,got what i meant ;-)
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Old 04-14-2005, 10:05 AM   #6 (permalink)
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Or is it a build up for this:

Quote:
Gas fuels China, Japan flare-up

Tokyo, April 13 (Reuters): Japan began allocating rights for gas exploration in a disputed area of the East China Sea today, a move likely to rile China at a time when ties are at their worst in decades due to a dispute over Japan’s wartime past.

A senior Chinese official, calling the energy dispute one of the main problems plaguing Sino-Japanese relations, had warned Tokyo a day earlier not to award the test drilling rights and said doing so would “fundamentally change the issue”.

Simmering tensions between the two Asian giants over a range of topics, especially what China sees as Japan’s failure to own up to wartime atrocities, erupted in China at the weekend, with thousands of people taking part in protests that turned violent.

Some concerns have risen about a backlash in Japan. Members of a Right-wing group shouted slogans at the Chinese embassy in Tokyo today and dragged Chinese flags behind two vans, a witness said.

Some Japanese media said officials had pressed for a decision on gas exploration before foreign minister Nobutaka Machimura goes to Beijing for a planned two-day visit from Sunday to seek a solution to the broader diplomatic impasse.

But top government spokesperson Hiroyuki Hosoda said the timing of the decision was coincidental. “This (drilling rights) is an issue that was pursued as an industrial issue. It just happened that awarding exploration rights began today,” Hosoda told a news conference.

Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi said Japan was not trying to be confrontational. “The aim is to turn a sea of confrontation into a sea of cooperation,” he said.

China and Japan, respectively the world’s second- and third-biggest oil consumers and increasingly linked by trade and investment, are at odds over China’s exploration for natural gas near an area Japan claims as its exclusive economic zone.

Tokyo has demanded China halt its gas exploration project and provide data on its development projects in the area. Unless China provides the data, it would be hard for Japan to consider the possibility of joint development of gas fields, a senior Japanese foreign ministry official said.
http://www.telegraphindia.com/105041...ry_4613561.asp
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