When talking about
America and Japan at the end of World War II, most Americans feel guilt. We
think of Nagasaki and Hiroshima, two of the greatest atrocities ever performed
by America. Most Japanese respect America, and in general have high opinions of
our nation as a whole. Japanese who speak with me generally respect me, and my
origins, and so the idea of insulting the place I call home is against their
very nature. When the topic of Nagasaki and Hiroshima come up, Japanese people
will generally say something along the lines of “War is a terrible thing, atrocities
were done by both sides.” It’s not a topic that is comfortable between an
American and a Japanese, so the topic usually shifts to what happened after
that.
I never really paid
attention in history class when I was in elementary through high school (I
actually really regret that now), so I don’t remember what we learned about
after the war, and how both sides came to peaceful agreements. As I remember
Americans went from WWII to being in a cold war with communist nations. Post
WWII however was a reformative time in Japanese history; their entire ruling
system was completely redefined. Most Japanese people can remember what they
learned about the end of WWII, and when they do they remember MacArthur.
I don’t remember a thing
about MacArthur from history class. I had to look up who he was after the first
time I heard his name here in Japan. I didn’t really believe what I heard about
him in Japan: an American General who ruled Japan after WWII, helped bring food
to the people, and paved the way for Japan to become a self reliant and
prosperous nation. I feel ignorant and bigoted when I think of how much this
rattled my entire belief system around American Military, post-war Japan, and
Japanese-American relations.
Until very recently I
assumed that Japanese and Germans must harbor lasting resentment towards
America due to WWII. My logic was, Americans still view Japan and Germany as
the people who were their enemies during WWII. Americans still seem to
associate Germans with Nazis, and Americans still associate Japan with Kamikaze
and Pearl Harbor. I was sure that there would be a similar reaction from people
of these countries towards America, they would have some reason to dislike
America as a residual effect of their loss during WWII. I was narrow minded,
and am now ashamed of the assumptions I made regarding this topic.
I will not speak of my
newfound knowledge regarding German sentiments on post-war international
relations, because although I have had enough conversations with Germans to
change my perspective, I have never experienced German culture first hand. However,
I do feel confident to speak on Japanese sentiments towards Americans, and
Japanese opinions of how Americans handled the occupation of Japan. I have
spoken to quite a few Japanese on this topic, some more in depth than others. I
will write below to the best of my abilities what Japanese have to say on the
topic:
When
Japan surrendered, it was a different country then it is today. Years of war
had devastated the people, and many people were starving. If Japan had not been
aided, countless lives would have been lost due to starvation. At this time the
Americans had very low opinions of the people of Japan. The countries had just
spent such a long time at war, and for war you must learn to hate your enemy. Americans
were not entirely wrong, Japan had done a lot of bad things, and it had lost
the war. Japan was at the mercy of America. America could have ruined Japan,
and in fact if it had been left up to the American president, Japan would have
paid in many ways for what it had done during and before the war. MacArthur
however knew the Japanese people, and made sure Japan got what was best.
When
MacArthur was young he did a home stay in Japan. This shaped his view of the
Japanese people, and helped him truly know what was best for post war Japan.
Even during the war MacArthur would not react to Japan’s advances in anger, he
would always devise a plan that would minimize casualties, but also destroy
Japan’s grip in the Pacific Islands. When the war was over, MacArthur was put
in charge of reforming Japan, and he did so with respect towards the Japanese
people, and with foresight. He truly helped shape Japan into the peaceful,
prosperous nation it is today.
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Since
speaking with so many Japanese I have done a bit of my own research on him. He
spent billions of dollars in food aid for the Japanese immediately after the
war. He did not hold the emperor accountable for war crimes, and did not strip
him of all his power. He looked at how the Japanese function, and how
hierarchies worked within their society, and used that to build a constitution
and ruling system that would function without foreign interference. MacArthur is a remarkable man for how he
handled post war Japan.
“The
Japanese people, since the war, have undergone the greatest reformation
recorded in modern history. With a commendable will, eagerness to learn, and
marked capacity to understand, they have, from the ashes left in war's wake,
erected in Japan an edifice dedicated to the supremacy of individual liberty
and personal dignity; and in the ensuing process there has been created a truly
representative government committed to the advance of political morality,
freedom of economic enterprise, and social justice. Politically, economically,
and socially Japan is now abreast of many free nations of the earth and will
not again fail the universal trust... I know of no nation more serene, orderly,
and industrious, nor in which higher hopes can be entertained for future
constructive service in the advance of the human race.”
-MacArthur
1952
Thank you for the history lesson Katie. I learned a lot. Growing up, my history teachers were of the generation that still harbored a lot of resentment towards the Japanese. Have you talked to older Japanese that were alive during the war. I'd be very curious what they would have to say.
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