Japan's history divide comes home in textbook row
By Isabel Reynolds
TOKYO (Reuters) - When Japanese soldiers gave out grenades to residents of Okinawa toward the end World War Two, Kiku Nakayama says she and her friends knew what they were for.
Then a teenage military nurse, she was told to fend for herself when the hospital where she worked was abandoned as U.S. forces approached.
"We were given grenades and we all interpreted that to mean we should use them to kill ourselves," Nakayama said.
"Many people were given two and told to throw one at the enemy and finish themselves off with the other."
More than 200,000 people died in the ferocious three-month battle for the southern Japanese island of Okinawa, about half of them civilians.
Some Okinawans committed suicide or were killed by relatives rather than face capture by Americans they had been taught to see as demons. No one knows how many died that way, but the local Ryukyu Shimpo newspaper recently put the figure at least 995.
Nakayama, 78, is one of many Okinawans outraged by a March government order that high-school textbook publishers remove references to soldiers forcing residents to kill themselves.
The move came under conservative then-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, known for his eagerness to escape what right-wing historians refer to as Japan's "masochistic" view of wartime history. Continued...