Japan Misses Opportunity to Heal Wartime Wounds
Proposed Exchange Program Again Ignores History Of Japan's American POW Slave Laborers SAN DIEGO, July 15 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- A proposed joint American/Japanese program designed to boost educational and cultural exchanges between the two countries is a missed opportunity to make amends to Americans who were held by the Japanese as prisoners of war and slave laborers during World War II. That is the conclusion of Dr. Lester Tenney, National Commander of the American Defenders of Bataan and Corregidor (ADBC), who recently returned from a trip to Japan. While meeting with members of the Diet, he questioned them on why American prisoners of war - most of whom had worked as slave laborers for such well-known Japanese companies such as Mitsui, Mitsubishi, and Kawasaki - have been excluded from all previous exchange and reconciliation programs with Japan. The new initiative, developed by Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda and President George W. Bush and announced at a summit between the two on July 6, 2008, appears to be similar to the 1995 "Peace, Friendship and Exchange Initiative" that provided for former POWs (and their families) from Great Britain, the Netherlands, Australia and New Zealand to visit Japan as guests to develop a cultural exchange and friendship dialogue. No former American POWs were invited to participate in the 1995 initiative. "With our deaths, Japan wants to bury its sordid history of having kept its greatest industries alive through the illegal use of our labor," said the 88 year-old Tenney. The former American POWs have asked President Bush and members of Congress and the Diet to delay any approval of the new exchange initiative until it is determined why Americans POWs were excluded from the Japanese-sponsored "Peace, Friendship and Exchange Initiative," of 1995. The ADBC wants the Government of Japan to establish with the US government and Japanese corporations a permanent Fund of Remembrance and Reconciliation to foster projects of exchange and education between Japan and the US for better understanding of Imperial Japan's Pacific War. The American Defenders of Bataan and Corregidor Inc., a nationally recognized veterans' organization, is comprised of remaining survivors of the Bataan Death March and those captured on Corregidor, who all became prisoners of the Japanese during World War II. The Bataan Death March is considered one of the era's worst war crimes. SOURCE American Defenders of Bataan and Corregidor Lester Tenney of American Defenders of Bataan and Corregidor, +1-760-704-1106
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