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    Bangkok Post, Thailand
    April 26 2005

    To each their own version of events

    The huge protests in China and South Korea have focused new attention
    on history and how it is preserved

    By ALAN DAWSON

    This week is the anniversary of the American invasion and failed
    colonisation of Canada. Military forces of the 38-year-old United
    States had earlier attacked and burned the Canadian capital city,
    York (later renamed Toronto). Sixteen months later, Canadian armed
    forces under the British General Robert Ross entered Washington, DC
    and immediately torched the capital of the new nation. They burnt the
    White House to the ground with particular glee.

    A funny thing has happened 192 years after these mutually marauding
    raids. School textbooks in Canada teach every child the glories of
    the punitive raid into Washington. US textbooks teach that the
    Americans defeated the British at New Orleans two years later and won
    the war. Nothing happened in Washington.

    A funnier thing: Canadians have never taken to the streets to protest
    these self-serving US school textbooks (although they seldom miss an
    opportunity to ask Americans how they like their new White House).

    This illustrates why it is difficult for so many people to grasp why
    millions of Chinese and Koreans seem so outraged about a few
    paragraphs in the world's most universally boring literature _ the
    high school history textbook.

    Of course, it is all part of the often convenient package of allowing
    pent-up domestic rage to channel to ``those foreigners''. No nation
    is innocent of this, from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe. The
    Chinese-language reference to outsiders as barbarians and the very
    name of the Middle Kingdom speaks loudly.

    Cambodians hate yuan (Vietnamese), the strongest word in Khmer
    describing foreigners. Similarly, although the American labour
    movement attacks companies for out-sourcing work, these attacks are
    as clearly anti-foreigner as the ``Japanese only'' signs on the Soi
    Thaniya karaoke bars.

    But the demand by huge numbers of Chinese and Korean civic leaders
    and common people to police the schoolbooks of two generations of
    Japanese children is unique.

    Not that textbook disputes themselves are unusual. Earlier this year,
    German educators debated a phrase in a sentence in a chapter about
    the 1915-16 Turkish-Armenian clash, anguishing over whether to let
    stand the reference to ``the genocide of the Armenian population of
    Anatolia''. They cut it out.

    But textbooks are always under discussion, and often heated debate.
    But the dispute is almost always over national textbooks, not those
    of nearby countries. And even heated debate is different from huge
    demonstrations in multiple cities over it.

    It is an interesting idea that the neighbours should write each
    others' textbooks.

    One wonders, though, just what Thai students would learn if the
    Burmese and Cambodians wrote history. Just a guess, but the chapters
    on Nakorn Wat (Angkor Wat) and Ayutthaya might look a little
    different from today's texts.

    Certainly, the Khmer have just a little different view of history
    than the Vietnamese. If five million Cambodians got the power,
    Vietnamese school children would be taking exams on their country's
    rapacious seizure of Saigon _ called Prey Nokor when it was a Khmer
    river settlement until the mid-17th century. Vietnamese high school
    history textbooks written by Cambodians probably would have a chapter
    on the unquenchable lust for territorial expansion by Vietnamese
    emperors, and the actual rape of a Cambodian princess by the Nguyen
    Dynasty emperor who would do anything to grab more land and power.

    Today's actual history textbooks by Vietnamese usually have a
    paragraph on a royal wedding which showed how Cambodians and
    Vietnamese of the Nguyen Dynasty co-existed closely.

    But then the Vietnamese have a different take on China than the
    current Chinese textbooks.

    If there were textbook protests in Vietnam, they would demand that
    Beijing recognise that Chinese emperors spent 1,200 years trying
    unsuccessfully to crush the Vietnamese, who did not have a generation
    of peace over the millennium starting 200 years BC.

    Mythical Vietnamese protesters would also insert a chapter about the
    1979 Chinese invasion of Vietnam, a scorched-earth raid that China
    conducted for no other reason than it could _ to ``punish'' Vietnam
    for liberating Cambodia from the Khmer Rouge. Chinese textbooks,
    after all, make no mention of these events, which went a long way to
    shaping Vietnam in all important ways.

    Thai educators have enough trouble trying to present history to young
    minds. There are still textbooks around that claim the Thai
    originated in Mongolia _ a mere piffle of a dispute compared with how
    to present the 1973, 1976 and 1992 democracy revolutions. Come to
    think of it, maybe it would be easier to let outsiders write Thai
    textbooks.

    But that brings up the point that no neighbours want to. Thais are
    not on the streets demanding that Laos, say, revise its lesson plan
    for Mathayom 2 students to stop calling the Thai expeditionary aid
    force to Laos ``mercenary invaders''.

    Chinese and Koreans, though, are not just on the streets but tolerant
    of hotheads and thugs who beat up Japanese students, trash
    Japanese-owned businesses and throw huge pavement stones at local
    drivers in their Japanese-brand (locally made) cars. Banners say
    ``Japanese dwarfs'' and ``Japanese devils''. So these are not all
    thoughtful people asking Japan to reconsider its past.

    They say, or rather scream that this is over a sentence in a
    paragraph in a textbook that might be seen by 1% of Japanese high
    school students.

    The sentence describes the well-named Rape of Nanking (Nanjing) as an
    ``incident''. Of course, the murderous, six-week conquest was among
    the worst atrocities of modern warfare. But that is why hundreds of
    textbooks, dozens of history books and scores of film and video
    documentaries so carefully study this episode. Not even a cloistered
    Japanese high school student can really escape the extremely public
    facts about the Nanjing massacre.

    Yet it seems beyond doubt the mostly young demonstrators in China and
    Korea, whose parents probably were not alive at the time, are
    entirely sincere in their almost incoherent rage about the failed
    Japanese textbook. Yes, it is a symptom of a general perception that
    the Japanese will never clear their guilt for colonial and wartime
    brutality, but the demand to edit the textbooks is specific.

    Many people must think this is seriously weird. Mexico and America
    have almost contrasting views of the often bloody 19th century wars
    that finally formed their border, but even a 10-person protest
    against the high school textbooks would be newsworthy. Millions of
    French people might love to write textbooks for German schools, but
    they are not on the streets demanding that right. Poles write entire
    jokebooks about the Russians, but do not protest the Moscow high
    school lessons.

    The British are outraged when Canadians claim credit for razing
    President James Madison's White House, but they don't want their
    former colony to rewrite the textbooks about it.

    When Canadian ambassador Fred Bild went to Hanoi to present his
    credentials a few years after the communist victory, his hosts took
    him on a tour of the Vietnam Military Museum and informed him
    proudly: ``We are the first nation in history to defeat the United
    States.'' Mr Bild was delighted to set the record straight that
    actually, no, Canada had been there, done that 160 years before _ and
    burnt the White House to boot.

    The Vietnamese were stricken. One official was so upset it seemed for
    a couple of minutes there might be a diplomatic incident. Maybe the
    Vietnamese should revise their textbooks over it.
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