As we enter a new century there is a continuing danger that the lessons of the horror of world war which were so bitterly learned in the first half of the twentieth century may be forgotten.
Professor Saburo Ienaga has devoted a large part of his life to ensuring that the truth about what happened in Asia in the Second World War is known and remembered in his native Japan.
Professor Ienaga was born in 1913 in Aichi Prefecture, Japan, and
graduated from the Literature Department at Tokyo Imperial University (the
present Tokyo University) in 1937. He became a teacher and in 1941 at the
time of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour he was a teacher in a high
school in Niigata. He did not participate in the Second World War, and has spoken of his shame at failing to offer resistance as a teacher to the compulsory teaching of war propaganda and imperial myths at his high
school during the war.
Professor Ienaga later became a professor at Tokyo University of Education and subsequently at Chuo University. He was awarded the Japan Academy Prize in 1948 and the title of Professor Emeritus at Tokyo University of
Education. He became a specialist in the history of Japanese thought and Japanese cultural and legal history, and is the author of nearly one hundred works spanning from ancient to contemporary subjects. His broad
range of subjects include " Historical study of the Independence of the Judiciary", " The Constitution in Historical Context", " Japanese Cultural History", and " The Pacific War".
In 1965, Professor Ienaga initiated a court case in Tokyo by suing the
Japanese Government, which through "textbook screening" i.e. amendment and
censorship of school textbooks, had been controlling the content of
history taught in secondary schools. Books censored had included some of
Professor Ienaga's works. Professor Ienaga then initiated his second and
third lawsuits against the government. Through the textbook screening the
government repeatedly removed or softened truthful descriptions of
atrocities committed by the Japanese military before and during World War
II. A notable example was the Government's insistence in Ienaga’s third
lawsuit that references to the Nanking Massacre had to be " mentioned as
what happened in confusion", although the massacre in fact involved the
systematic killing of hundreds of thousands of civilians over a period of
weeks. Another issue in dispute was the government's insistence that all
textbooks avoid the negative expression "aggression" in relation to the
Japanese Army's occupation of China and instead use only the term "
military advance". Professor Ienaga's case was based on the argument that
textbook screening violated the freedom of expression and freedom of
education guaranteed in the Japanese constitution, and so were
unconstitutional and illegal.
Professor Ienaga lost the first two lawsuits which he brought against the
government in 1965 and 1967. The first suit lasted 27 years until 1993,
and the second lasted 22 years from 1967 to 1989. In 1984 he initiated a
third suit arising from eight screening comments made by the government on
his draft textbooks from 1980 to 1983. In 1989 the district court ruled
against most of his arguments. He then appealed to the High Court which
ruled that three of the eight screening comments were illegal. These three
screening comments include those relating to the description of the
Nanking Massacre, including mention of widespread rape.
In 1997, Professor Ienaga's appeal on the remaining five points finally
reached the Japanese Supreme Court, which ruled 3-2 in Professor Ienaga's
favour that the Education Ministry had acted illegally when it removed
from one of Professor Ienaga's textbooks a description of Japan's
biological experiments on 3000 people in northern China during World War
II. In these biological experiments, conducted by a germ warfare group
called Unit 731, subjects were operated on without anaesthetics, injected
with diseases such as typhoid and allowed to die without treatment. The
Japanese Government has never acknowledged the existence of this unit, but
its existence was documented because of the later confessions by some of
the doctors involved in the activities.
Ienaga’s court challenge encouraged many school textbook authors to
include descriptions of Japanese war atrocities in their texts. As a
result, textbooks were significantly improved in the late 1980s and early
1990s.
However despite the fact that Professor Ienaga has devoted himself full
time to the issue of the textbook screening since his retirement, and has
been battling continuously to make it possible for the truth about World
War II to be told since before he commenced his first legal action 35
years ago, his victory in 1997 was only partial. The Supreme Court
rejected claims that four other portions of his book had been illegally
censored including a passage which described the rape of Chinese women by
Japanese soldiers in Northern China.
This partial victory reflects a continuing divide in Japan between those
like Professor Ienaga who want the truth about World War II to be known
and revisionists who claim that well-documented war crimes and atrocities
did not occur. These revisionist claims are often used by right wing
militarist groups and their sympathizers which continue to exercise an
insidious influence on Japanese society. Those like Professor Ienaga who
have spoken out for the truth have often been physically attacked by
extremists or otherwise penalized. When Professor Ienaga first gained a
victory in one of his textbook lawsuits in 1970 right-wing extremists
issued death threats to him (as well as to the judge and to lawyers
involved in the case) and his house was surrounded day and night by thugs
who kept him awake by shouting slogans and banging pots and pans. The
actions of Professor Ienaga in continuing to fight for the truth have
therefore required great courage, as well as determination and
persistence.
By his determined fight over so many years to ensure that Japanese young
people are able to read the truth about their country's recent history
Professor Ienaga has done more than probably any other living person to
ensure that the lessons of the history of World War II in Asia are not
forgotten and that George Santayana's grim prophecy is not fulfilled in
this region of the world. His contribution deserves the international
recognition which the Nobel Peace Prize confers and the aims of ensuring
lasting peace and discouraging revival of militarism will be greatly
furthered by such an award. We therefore nominate Professor Ienaga for the
2001 Nobel Peace Prize.
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Last edited 9/10/2007 1:23:02 PM