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  • Ontario Students First In West To Be Taught Details Of WartimeAtroci

    ONTARIO STUDENTS FIRST IN WEST TO BE TAUGHT DETAILS OF WARTIME ATROCITIES IN ASIA
    By David Giddens CBCUnlocked

    CBCUnlocked, Canada
    Sept 26 2005

    "See that?" John Stroud, Canadian Hong Kong War veteran, is pointing
    a bony finger at a black-and-white picture taken 60 years ago of a
    gaunt young man. "That's me. In the Japanese slave camps." He turns
    to his audience of students, teachers and media in Toronto's Jarvis
    Collegiate auditorium. "I weighed 182 pounds when I was captured. I
    was 62 pounds when I got out."

    "What we taught in the past was incomplete," says Sarah Giddens,
    history teacher and contributor to the successful effort to make
    Ontario the first jurisdiction in the Western world to include a
    section of history about the Second World War in Asia. "Most students,
    most teachers, are shocked to learn the facts about this period and
    place in history."

    Ontario's new Grade 10 curriculum now includes specific examples of
    such war atrocities as those suffered by Stroud and other prisoners
    of war. They also include information on the 1937 Nanjing Massacre,
    during which hundreds of thousands of Chinese were killed during
    a six-week spree by Japanese troops, and the abuse of the "Comfort
    Women," Asian women forced into prostitution by the troops during
    the war. Wartime history, including those incidents, is still the
    subject of angry debate today between Japan and other Asian nations
    including China and Korea.

    Ontario's Ministry of Education takes the position that the province
    has a duty to train students to form broader perspectives on history.

    Case in point: many, perhaps most, Canadians have been taught the
    global conflict began in 1939 with the invasion of Poland, while many
    Americans might argue the war really began at Pearl Harbor in 1941.

    But for millions of Asians, the Second World War began a decade
    earlier, when Japan invaded Manchuria in 1931. And that shift in
    perspective is the entire point behind the new course material: The
    Search for Global Citizenship: The Violation of Human Rights in Asia,
    1931-1945."

    The project is due in very large part to the efforts of
    Chinese-Canadian philanthropist Dr. Joseph Wong. Eight years ago,
    he was instrumental in forming ALPHA, The Association for Learning &
    Preserving the History of WWII in Asia-Toronto, because "very few
    people in the world know about the truth. ALPHA is here to make sure
    that justice finally prevails for those 35 million souls who perished
    during the war in Asia."

    "I draw a parallel: postwar Germany made it a crime to deny the
    Holocaust, and compensated victims of the Second World War, and truly
    expressed remorse in making sure that all German children will learn
    the truth about the war, but look at the aggressor Japanese nation
    today. They still try to hide facts of the war. They still want to
    change history in the textbooks, so that Japanese children are denied
    the right to know about what happened during that particular dark
    chapter of history."

    The Japanese government vehemently denies this assessment of history
    and says its peacetime record since the war proves it is not an
    aggressor nation. However the issue continues to sour relations
    between China and Japan. Changes to Japanese textbooks this spring
    led to a tense standoff between China and Japan, with Chinese crowds
    attacking Japanese businesses in Beijing and other cities.

    Every secondary school in Ontario now has documents, videos and web
    information to support the revised curriculum. The foreword is by
    Canadian journalist, author and social activist June Callwood: "If
    world peace ever happens it will be built on knowledge. Young people
    cannot understand the importance of defending existing protections of
    human life and dignity without knowing that the wall between decency
    and depravity is paper thin."

    The goal is not to isolate atrocities committed by the Japanese
    Imperial Army, but to help students understand these events in the
    same way they understand other crimes against humanity, such as the
    Jewish Holocaust, the Armenian massacre or the Rwandan genocide. It
    is not about vilifying Japan, but about enlightening a new generation
    of students and leaders to the fact that humanity, in all parts of
    the globe, has a history of committing human rights abuses.

    Maria Y.M. Yau, project co-ordinator with the Toronto District school
    board, admits that, within the Japanese community, this remains
    controversial material, but adds, "As a global citizen, this is
    not controversial. It is a history we should share with our younger
    students ... as citizens we are all entitled to know these facts."

    Yau's regret is that recent history is still susceptible to political
    manoeuvring. Among some in the Chinese communities, some of this
    history is still viewed with skepticism, because students from China
    have learned to distrust much of what they were taught under the
    propaganda-laden Communist regime.

    Linda Mowatt - president of the Ontario History, Humanities and
    Social Sciences Teachers' Association - says that distrust is part of
    the reason the new curriculum is so useful: "This is history being
    revealed in the time that students are learning it .... They are
    getting critical skills about the act of revealing history. Students
    are learning that the truth emerges slowly and methodically."

    Jack Fu, a Grade 11 student at Jarvis, had previously taken five
    years of history in China. Upon moving to Canada, he says, "I was
    surprised to not learn this in history classes here. I find a lot of
    similarities between Nanjing and the Jewish Holocaust."

    Jasmine Li, now in Grade 12, says, "When I took Grade 10 history, I
    learned about Europe ... events in Germany and Austria and so forth,
    but it is really important that people know what happened in the
    whole world. Not just part of it."

    For his part, Dr. Wong is optimistic about the eventual impact of the
    new course: "I see this as a step toward the closure of the Second
    World War in Asia."

    http://www.cbcunlocked.com/artman/publish/features/article_449.shtml
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