2007/9/27 20:18
The truth of the "Utoro issue" 分類なし
As "An article carried by the Asahi Daily on 1959 7/13th" shows, Koreans living in Japan with permanent status are not the casualties and their descendants of so called "forced taking" during the WW2.
Now, the issue of Koreans in Japan who live in the Utoro area in Uji City, Kyoto Pref. is taken up by the "the Chosun Ilbo," one of the major newspaper publishing firms in South Korea.
At first, the Chosun Ilbo argued that many Koreans who were forcibly brought to Japan are living in the Utoro are, for your ref.>"国内外 NGO、日本ウトロ地区の住民支援声明発表" & "京都ウトロ地区問題、国際対策会議発足へ"
"京都ウトロ地区問題:住民たちは追い出されてしまうのか(上" & "京都ウトロ地区問題:住民たちは追い出されてしまうのか(中" & "京都ウトロ地区問題:住民たちは追い出されてしまうのか(下" show that 203 Koreans of 65 households are living there on the land they don't possess.
Anyway, these article uncover different circumstances about the root of them. According to these articles, 1300 workers worked there didn't experience "forced taking". It says that they immigrated to the suzerain Japan due to various reasons such as economic conditions regardless to their sentiment.
There is still a sophism -- they came to Japan based on their willing because there was no coercion.
But even though, it must be a major step that one of the major Korean newspapers admits that "forced taking is nothing more than a fabricated legend."
One committee under the South Korean government -- that aims to study the truth about casualties of forced mobilization under the colonial rule regime of the Japanese Empire -- also cleared in the report issued at the end of last year that "most of them are not conscripted workers, but Koreans who lived in Japan at that time.
According to that report, they were Koreans who moved to Japan to avoid poverty in the colonized Korean Peninsula due to various reasons around the end of 1930s.
The articles insist obstinately that the inhabitants of the Utoro area are still victims of the colonial rule by Japan.
But is that true? I disagree. The poverty in the then Korean Peninsula wasn't due to Japan. It was due to the rule by Yi Dynasty.
In addition, even though Japan provided returning program for Koreans after the end of the WW2, they selected to remain here on their own willing. Casualty? Definitely no!
The article yet continue. According to that, one of the Koreans living in the Utoro purchased the land, then resoled to the one firm in a disgraceful way.
This person "A" was financed by one of the executive officers of the "All Korean Residents' Organization in Japan"
And the firm purchased the land from "A" was established by this executive officer "B" aiming to this dealing. "A" purchase the land at \300 million, but notified \400 million.
Then received \450 million, then ran away under cover of darkness. "B" and sold his firm to Japan's firm and withdraw from the Utoro issue.
Namely, current Korean residents in the Utoro are not victims of Japan, but betrayers of their ethnic group. The Utoro issue is nothing more than a inner trouble of Koreans.
Anyway, what does matter for Japanese is that "we should halt to consider Koreans living in Japan as casualties of forced taking."
Japanese have been cheated by not only by them but also by domestic anti-Japan left wingers such as the Asahi Daily or the Mainichi Daily.
Indeed, it was the Asahi itself that reported the important article in 1959. But after that, perhaps, the Asahi changed its position. But we shouldn't be cheated by them anymore.
We should recognize well that "even one of the major newspapers in South Korea and a governmental committee recognize that 'they were not forced workers, but economic emmigrants'."
So we should recognize well that the domestic anti-Japan left-wingers such as the Asahi and the Mainichi are liars who try to imprint anti-Japan sentiment to Japanese to make Japanese can't love our home country.
Indeed, we Japanese have been cheated by left-wingers.
Now, the issue of Koreans in Japan who live in the Utoro area in Uji City, Kyoto Pref. is taken up by the "the Chosun Ilbo," one of the major newspaper publishing firms in South Korea.
At first, the Chosun Ilbo argued that many Koreans who were forcibly brought to Japan are living in the Utoro are, for your ref.>"国内外 NGO、日本ウトロ地区の住民支援声明発表" & "京都ウトロ地区問題、国際対策会議発足へ"
"京都ウトロ地区問題:住民たちは追い出されてしまうのか(上" & "京都ウトロ地区問題:住民たちは追い出されてしまうのか(中" & "京都ウトロ地区問題:住民たちは追い出されてしまうのか(下" show that 203 Koreans of 65 households are living there on the land they don't possess.
Anyway, these article uncover different circumstances about the root of them. According to these articles, 1300 workers worked there didn't experience "forced taking". It says that they immigrated to the suzerain Japan due to various reasons such as economic conditions regardless to their sentiment.
There is still a sophism -- they came to Japan based on their willing because there was no coercion.
But even though, it must be a major step that one of the major Korean newspapers admits that "forced taking is nothing more than a fabricated legend."
One committee under the South Korean government -- that aims to study the truth about casualties of forced mobilization under the colonial rule regime of the Japanese Empire -- also cleared in the report issued at the end of last year that "most of them are not conscripted workers, but Koreans who lived in Japan at that time.
According to that report, they were Koreans who moved to Japan to avoid poverty in the colonized Korean Peninsula due to various reasons around the end of 1930s.
The articles insist obstinately that the inhabitants of the Utoro area are still victims of the colonial rule by Japan.
But is that true? I disagree. The poverty in the then Korean Peninsula wasn't due to Japan. It was due to the rule by Yi Dynasty.
In addition, even though Japan provided returning program for Koreans after the end of the WW2, they selected to remain here on their own willing. Casualty? Definitely no!
The article yet continue. According to that, one of the Koreans living in the Utoro purchased the land, then resoled to the one firm in a disgraceful way.
This person "A" was financed by one of the executive officers of the "All Korean Residents' Organization in Japan"
And the firm purchased the land from "A" was established by this executive officer "B" aiming to this dealing. "A" purchase the land at \300 million, but notified \400 million.
Then received \450 million, then ran away under cover of darkness. "B" and sold his firm to Japan's firm and withdraw from the Utoro issue.
Namely, current Korean residents in the Utoro are not victims of Japan, but betrayers of their ethnic group. The Utoro issue is nothing more than a inner trouble of Koreans.
Anyway, what does matter for Japanese is that "we should halt to consider Koreans living in Japan as casualties of forced taking."
Japanese have been cheated by not only by them but also by domestic anti-Japan left wingers such as the Asahi Daily or the Mainichi Daily.
Indeed, it was the Asahi itself that reported the important article in 1959. But after that, perhaps, the Asahi changed its position. But we shouldn't be cheated by them anymore.
We should recognize well that "even one of the major newspapers in South Korea and a governmental committee recognize that 'they were not forced workers, but economic emmigrants'."
So we should recognize well that the domestic anti-Japan left-wingers such as the Asahi and the Mainichi are liars who try to imprint anti-Japan sentiment to Japanese to make Japanese can't love our home country.
Indeed, we Japanese have been cheated by left-wingers.
