Simple Nationalism Is a Dangerous Fantasy—The “Protocol of Omission” the Japanese Must Learn—

This essay argues that a nation is a people who share causal stories such as history, grammar, custom, and common sense, and is never complete from the outset. Pointing to misunderstandings surrounding the Siberian internment and the comfort women issue, it contends that the Japanese have historically lacked a full understanding of slavery and abducted slave labor, and insists that a nation must strengthen itself through conscious learning rather than simple nationalism.

2019-04-11
Simple nationalism that assumes from the very beginning that one’s own nation is already complete and flawless is no good.
That way lies fantasy.

This is a chapter I published on 2018-11-06 under the title: That Is Why, Even When They Were Taken to Siberia as Defeated Slaves, They Thought It Was Mere Internment and Worked.
The following is from an essay by Hiroshi Furuta, Professor at the Graduate School of the University of Tsukuba, published yesterday in the Seiron column of the Sankei Shimbun under the title “A Unified Korea Is a Dangerous Fantasy.”

Earlier in this Seiron column, I said that “there is neither progress nor inevitability in history,” but if one asks what does progress, the answer is obviously human beings.
History is written by human beings; human beings are not written by some “god of history.”
However, since human beings die within a single generation, what is passed down to their descendants and progresses is culture.
More specifically, it is causal stories such as “history, grammar, customs, and common sense.”
When one says feudalism, for example, Oda, Toyotomi, and Tokugawa immediately come to mind, or one knows that Japanese cuisine looks beautiful when arranged in a certain way, or one senses it as outrageous that a great sumo wrestler like Takanohana should be punished by petty stablemasters.
All of these are causal stories.

◎Simple nationalism is dangerous.

A nation is the people who share these “causal stories.”
If you speak of feudalism to Koreans, they will not understand.
That is because they have no such history.
They remained a centralized monarchy throughout, and the regions were never industrialized by local lords.
In the basement food floors of Korean department stores, there is no rich variety colored by regional character.
The idea that feudalism existed all over the world is a lie of Marx.
For that reason, a “nation” is not something complete and perfect.
Things in history that it did not take an interest in have dropped out.
In the case of the Japanese nation, because everyone liked division of labor and everyone worked, it does not understand “slavery.”
That is why, even when they were taken to Siberia as defeated slaves, they thought it was mere internment and worked.
Because they do not understand abducted slaves, when Koreans say, “You abducted women and made them sexual slaves,” even though they were in fact commercial prostitutes, the Japanese are liable to think, “Perhaps that is so,” and thus have false accusations laid upon them.
Let us learn this as a “protocol of omission” so that we are never deceived again.
A nation is something that must make such efforts and thereby strengthen itself.
That is why, generation after generation, it progresses and becomes wiser.
Simple nationalism that assumes from the very beginning that one’s own nation is already complete and flawless is no good.
That way lies fantasy.
To be continued.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Please enter the result of the calculation above.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.