N this women's
month of March, we note the intersec-tions of war and peace in the past and at
present.
For those who are unfamiliar with World War 2 as well as
those who think that nukes are the worst weapons of mass destruction, the
American raid of March 9-10, 1945, firebombing Tokyo, resulted in a carnage that
burned 100,000 Japanese urbanites engaged in armaments production and civilian
life.
This type of military operation was neither the first nor the
last in the East and the West, too. And torching Tokyo came on the heels of the
Japanese Rape of Manila - an atrocity that felled 100,000 inhabitants of the
Philippine capital.
The difference? The Philippines was a peaceful commonwealth
that was wantonly invaded by Japan. The former was a victim, the latter an
aggressor that perpetuated crimes against peace and against humanity.
Pandacan, for instance, was a haven for men of letters and
the arts when it was occupied by the Japanese who turned the Zamora Elementary
School into their garrison. Japanese sentries at checkpoints are remembered by
living witnesses like Gloria Natividad Bonus for slapping residents. [Fernando
A. Santiago Jr., "A Social History of Pandacan, Manila, 1941-1945"]
Filipinos whose innocence was shattered by Oriental despotism
saw their premier city destroyed in February 1945. They continue to be hurt by
the realization that the pre-war progress, beauty and prominence attained by
their capital cannot be easily recovered.
The Battle for Manila left an indelible mark on human memory
and written history, and Manilans choose to commemorate this event in the second
month of every year in the Christian calendar. Included in the city's activities
was the tertulia on the fates of Pandacan and Intramuros. In that afternoon
discussion last March 3, scholars and students of the PLM were joined by
surviving comfort women organized as Malaya Lolas and LILA PILIPINA under the
care of the KAISAKA and the Gabriela. Lola Lita narrated her survival of the
1944 Rape of Mapanique (Candaba, Pampanga), while Lola Asyang testified on her
ordeal in Fort Santiago, which was run by the Kempeitai (Japanese military
police).
The tertulia, a monthly project of the city government (Mayor
Alfredo S. Lim), Manila Historical and Heritage Commission (Gemma Cruz-Araneta),
and Museo ng Maynila (Ma. Monina Katherina B. Santiago), was an important venue
for the concrescence of academe, NGOs, communities, national agencies and local
public sector.
The coalescence between oral and written histories was
highlighted once more in the monthly book club gathering at the Power Books
Specialty Store, Robinsons Place Ermita last March 4. Two members of the Malaya
Lolas provided eyewitness accounts of the Japanese Occupation that informed the
book lovers' discussion of Richard B. Frank's "Downfall" (Penguin Books, 1999).
Frank, army man and scholar, tapped into previously secret
sources and illuminated the following:
1. The Japanese preferred death to surrender, an ugly fact
stated in "The Fundamental Policy to be Followed Henceforth in the Conduct of
the War" that was presented to the Emperor on June 8, 1945.
2. The eight men who ran Japan (premier, foreign minister,
army minister, navy minister, Imperial Army chief of staff, Imperial Navy chief
of staff, Emperor and his Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal) were open to
negotiations with the Allies for a cease-fire if and only if it meant the
preservation of their elitist imperial-militarist system, Japanese troops
withdrawal on their own accord from occupied territories, and Japanese
disarmament that assured "minimum defense" of their home islands.
3. The Tokyo regime saw the neutrality of the Soviet Union as
the linchpin of its military-diplomatic strategy.
4. Soviet participation in the Pacific War on the Allied side
plus the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki shook Japanese belligerence.
5. The American nukes lessened, not worsened, the blood-price
of Japan's conditional capitulation.
Frank's take on the termination of Hirohito's bloody venture
validates longstanding delineation of Nippon as the militaristic, racist and
chauvinist imperialist of the Orient. As Clara Zetkin pointed out in July 1922,
"Japanese capitalism has developed the militaristic side of
capitalism more than any other country...It combines the features of the highest
developed capitalist State with the highest developed military features of an
Imperial State." ["The Struggle Against New Imperialistic Wars"]
It comes as a surprising mark of progress, therefore, that
today there are Japanese who, recognizing the sins of the Showa regime, are
engaged in bilateral civic education and international campaign for social
justice.
The Santama Peace Cycle of Japan, represented by Susumu
Omori, Ichiro Hirata, Shigenobu Kodama and Kan Ito, observes its 14th year in
the Philippines with a bicycling campaign to call for redress for the rape
victims of World War II and the recent rape victims of foreign troops in
Okinawa, rejection of the unfair JPEPA, and ratification of the Basel Ban
Amendment.
The Santama Peace Cycle shared the fact that the collapse of
the bubble economy in Japan has weakened job security, giving rise to "shikko,"
or downsizing via employee transfer. A parallel phenomenon in the Philippines,
according to an NGO (Pagkakaisa ng Kababaihan para sa Kalayaan), is
contractualization, which makes women workers prey to sexual abuse, trafficking
and hazardous jobs.
This vulnerability has to be addressed to give meaning to the observance of
International Wo-men's Day. Champion the Filipina. "Her rights as wife and
mother need to be restored and permanently secured." [Clara Zetkin, October 16,
1896]