The Prague Post - 'It hurts my heart': Japan's Kanto massacre, 100 years on

EUR -
AED 4.127425
AFN 79.221816
ALL 98.719773
AMD 436.096178
ANG 2.011113
AOA 1030.458576
ARS 1264.216617
AUD 1.731721
AWG 2.02552
AZN 1.913303
BAM 1.978295
BBD 2.267919
BDT 136.471842
BGN 1.960051
BHD 0.423541
BIF 3299.265644
BMD 1.123728
BND 1.466091
BOB 7.761359
BRL 6.308047
BSD 1.123288
BTN 95.811769
BWP 15.334093
BYN 3.675949
BYR 22025.070373
BZD 2.256266
CAD 1.563252
CDF 3226.223216
CHF 0.939459
CLF 0.027541
CLP 1056.866107
CNY 8.097978
CNH 8.089881
COP 4732.861742
CRC 570.798252
CUC 1.123728
CUP 29.778794
CVE 111.389579
CZK 24.934387
DJF 199.708983
DKK 7.459672
DOP 66.187401
DZD 149.654717
EGP 56.650612
ERN 16.855921
ETB 149.564786
FJD 2.53671
FKP 0.846333
GBP 0.842077
GEL 3.079374
GGP 0.846333
GHS 14.299431
GIP 0.846333
GMD 80.907899
GNF 9725.866387
GTQ 8.636204
GYD 234.998015
HKD 8.766377
HNL 28.958707
HRK 7.533585
HTG 146.86195
HUF 404.243759
IDR 18586.350075
ILS 4.002946
IMP 0.846333
INR 95.894688
IQD 1472.083785
IRR 47308.95239
ISK 145.713905
JEP 0.846333
JMD 178.944808
JOD 0.797173
JPY 164.323932
KES 145.24132
KGS 98.270188
KHR 4516.262872
KMF 495.005489
KPW 1011.383911
KRW 1568.982799
KWD 0.34531
KYD 0.936027
KZT 570.949652
LAK 24295.000867
LBP 100629.8496
LKR 335.677034
LRD 224.324282
LSL 20.597333
LTL 3.318076
LVL 0.679732
LYD 6.197367
MAD 10.45669
MDL 19.633911
MGA 5039.920138
MKD 61.523124
MMK 2359.135491
MNT 4020.301939
MOP 9.016468
MRU 44.500752
MUR 51.859743
MVR 17.361736
MWK 1950.79217
MXN 21.761916
MYR 4.829805
MZN 71.817273
NAD 20.597404
NGN 1801.100306
NIO 41.325094
NOK 11.566759
NPR 153.293715
NZD 1.886133
OMR 0.432641
PAB 1.123253
PEN 4.11425
PGK 4.576663
PHP 62.689433
PKR 316.610381
PLN 4.246012
PYG 8970.120318
QAR 4.090938
RON 5.104646
RSD 118.569858
RUB 90.339744
RWF 1595.693874
SAR 4.215049
SBD 9.395884
SCR 15.986822
SDG 674.793662
SEK 10.878711
SGD 1.457846
SHP 0.883074
SLE 25.565211
SLL 23564.01622
SOS 642.211833
SRD 41.016595
STD 23258.902464
SVC 9.828897
SYP 14610.380088
SZL 20.597676
THB 37.349316
TJS 11.647741
TMT 3.938667
TND 3.396467
TOP 2.631885
TRY 43.568444
TTD 7.622713
TWD 33.943891
TZS 3029.012918
UAH 46.680838
UGX 4110.799388
USD 1.123728
UYU 46.91346
UZS 14535.422542
VES 104.44601
VND 29149.506402
VUV 134.990964
WST 3.133593
XAF 663.489834
XAG 0.034221
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.036931
XDR 0.825533
XOF 646.716307
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.695652
ZAR 20.458144
ZMK 10114.896444
ZMW 29.765869
ZWL 361.839983
  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    22.06

    -0.09%

  • BCC

    0.6100

    93.71

    +0.65%

  • BCE

    -0.5800

    21.98

    -2.64%

  • JRI

    -0.1300

    12.88

    -1.01%

  • RIO

    0.8600

    62.27

    +1.38%

  • SCS

    -0.1100

    10.71

    -1.03%

  • NGG

    0.0000

    67.53

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    22.39

    +0.4%

  • GSK

    -1.0200

    36.35

    -2.81%

  • RBGPF

    63.8100

    63.81

    +100%

  • AZN

    -1.2300

    67.72

    -1.82%

  • RYCEF

    0.3200

    10.7

    +2.99%

  • BTI

    -0.2900

    40.69

    -0.71%

  • BP

    0.3700

    30.56

    +1.21%

  • RELX

    0.5700

    52.4

    +1.09%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    9.06

    -0.11%

'It hurts my heart': Japan's Kanto massacre, 100 years on
'It hurts my heart': Japan's Kanto massacre, 100 years on / Photo: Richard A. Brooks - AFP

'It hurts my heart': Japan's Kanto massacre, 100 years on

This week Japan marks 100 years since the Great Kanto Earthquake that killed 105,000 people. Less well known is the subsequent massacre of thousands of ethnic Koreans that haunts the community to this day.

Text size:

Over several days of horror after the quake of September 1, 1923, mobs armed with swords, iron bars and bamboo sticks went on a killing spree of Koreans living in the Tokyo region, after malicious rumours spread about the community.

Historians say that soldiers with machine guns from the imperial military actively participated -- something Japan is yet to fully face up to.

Kim Do-im, 86, believes her uncle was among those murdered in the flaming ruins of Tokyo after the quake. His body was never found.

"His tomb is in Korea but it doesn't contain his ashes," Kim, who was born and grew up in Japan, told AFP.

"My uncle was 33 when he died. He had three children," she said. "I first heard the story when I was around five years old... It hurts my heart."

- Deadly inferno -

The death toll from the 7.9-magnitude quake, one of the deadliest of the 20th century, was made much worse by huge blazes that ripped through the mostly wooden houses that made up Tokyo back then.

With a news blackout, rumours then started that Korean students and workers wanted to take advantage of the chaos to loot, kill Japanese citizens, and even stage a coup.

Nobody knows precisely how many Korean, and also Chinese, immigrants the bloodthirsty mobs butchered.

But the consensus among historians is that "several thousand" perished, said Tessa Morris-Suzuki, professor emerita of Japanese history at the Australian National University.

And it wasn't just ordinary people who were the perpetrators.

"There is a considerable amount of testimony collected immediately after the event showing that members of the police and army participated in the killings," she told AFP.

- Rumours -

Historian Kenji Hasegawa from Yokohama National University, who has conducted extensive research into what happened, agrees.

"It was not just vigilantes with their bamboo poles out there. The military used machine guns and that's where the largest massacres took place," Hasegawa told AFP.

Xenophobia towards Korean immigrants was rife in 1920s Japan, which at the time occupied the Korean peninsula and was about to become the military dictatorship that would drag the country into World War II.

The government, under pressure to deal with the aftermath of the quake, used Koreans as a convenient, imagined enemy within to avoid angry Japanese people rioting.

"We don't have enough evidence to pinpoint the blame for the first rumours on the state," Hasegawa said, but since the 1960s there has "pretty much been a consensus" among scholars that it had a "central role" in spreading them.

For the authorities, the Korean massacre "was a means of crowd control, of controlling the Japanese crowd, which was much larger," he suspects.

- 'Killed on the spot' -

Masao Nishizaki heads Housenka, a small association based in eastern Tokyo devoted to keeping memories of the atrocity alive.

Walking along the grassy banks of the Arakawa River in his working-class neighbourhood, he stopped abruptly to say: "It's here."

Citing eyewitness accounts from the time, he told AFP that armed men stood near a bridge, screening terrified people desperate to escape the fires.

Those identified as Koreans were "killed on the spot" and their bodies "piled up like wood", said Nishizaki.

Later the Japanese army also "lined up Koreans on the river bank and executed them with machine guns," he added.

- Symbolic trials -

Japan has long been accused of trying to erase the memory of its crimes in Asia during its imperialistic period, often poisoning its regional relations.

Historians say that successive governments have failed to investigate the events of 1923 properly or admit to the authorities' active role.

A few months after the massacre, the government conducted an investigation but put the toll in the hundreds.

It also put some vigilante group members on trial but went no further.

More recently, the Japanese government has repeatedly said it has no archives to verify fully the circumstances around the tragedy.

In 2009 a government-organised conference issued a report on the earthquake which touched on the killings but avoided -- except for in one table -- the word "massacre", Morris-Suzuki said.

"This report, of course, is a different matter from an official admission of the massacre by the Japanese prime minister or cabinet, but it does indicate that the Japanese authorities are unable to ignore or deny that these events took place," she said.

- Different opinions -

Since the 1970s citizen groups have held an annual commemoration of the massacre every September 1, and for years the governor of Tokyo sent a message of condolence.

But in 2017, right-wing governor Yuriko Koike -- one of a group of politicians like former premier Shinzo Abe who struck a more nationalistic tone with regard to Japan's past -- stopped sending this message.

Koike argued that there were "different opinions" about what happened and that she had sent a eulogy to a separate earthquake victim memorial service held the same day in the same park.

In doing so, the governor is "erasing" the memory of the massacre and "instilling doubt" about its authenticity, said Hasegawa.

The massacre "should never have happened," said Kim. "I want the government to say sorry to the victims."

D.Kovar--TPP