deviant art





Login
Join deviantART for FREE Take the Tour Lost Password?
Deviant Login
Shop  Join deviantART for FREE Take the Tour
[x]

More from ~deathbybroccoli

Featured in Groups:

Details

August 8, 2010
140 KB
960×856
Link
Thumb

Statistics

Comments: 268
Favourites: 1,053 [who?]
Views: 13,765 (19 today)
Downloads: 285 (0 today)
[x]
:icondeathbybroccoli:
"We cannot change the past, but we can change our attitude toward it. Uproot guilt and plant forgiveness. Tear out arrogance and seed humility. Exchange love for hate --- thereby, making the present comfortable and the future promising."



EDIT: Sorry if I dont reply to you all..I'm too tired to now. But thank you for leaving comments; I do read them to get an idea of everyone's opinions on this matter~


This was mainly to do with a conversation a friend on LJ had posted...in regards to the Hiroshima bombing memorial day.

On several sites, there were many comments made about the bombing about how the Japanese "deserved" it, (and that bombing Hiroshima to end WWII was "one of the greatest humanitarian acts in human history.”)

Instead of rant forever, I'll just quote this comment, which pretty much states my opinion towards this kind of attitude/statement:

“How do heinous acts by Japanese soldiers (most of whom were forced into military service through drafts, and would be killed if they did not follow orders) compare to bombing and killing 200,000 civilians whose families had already been torn apart by, abused by, and were terrified of their own government?..... But I guess that is the bright side of being a victor in a war....you can focus on your defeated enemy's atrocities, while ignoring or justifying your own....” #please see note at bottom of page



After reading all those comments...I asked my brother,
"Do you think peace is possible?"
He very bluntly replied "No, because people will never change their thinking"

Well to me, if we don't try to change it, how will we know? I really hope that one day we will be able to obtain World Peace. The first step - hard, yes, but not impossible - is forgiveness. This "blaming game" needs to stop...


*"Forgiveness does not equal forgetting. It is about healing the memory of the harm, not erasing it."

* "It takes courage and commitment to act in a more forgiving fashion. It is not at all a sign of weakness but a mark of strength."

* "Let us forgive each other - only then will we live in peace”

* "...in a very real sense, without forgiveness, there is no future."




(by the way, Kiku was trying to paint over it himself (by precisely writing over all the words to cover them), then Alfred came along to help (and decided just to paint over the whole thing xD)...Together they're trying to clear the wall o3o~)



INSANELY LONG EDIT
EDIT 1 Ahh because it's not entirely clear, I have to say this now: I'm not trying to state who is wrong/who was wrong, and who's right in terms of the war, the bombings, or whether the bombings were necessary or not. Not the point of this picture, sorrry if you got that impression. that's not, nor will it ever be my intention - I'm not here to argue about the past actions of any country.

((long justification/explaining my point of view below, you dont need to read it unless you want to know what I mean. xDD))


my anger comes from the comments on news sites that were about the Hiroshima memorial day...Not at a country, just a particular attitude.

What I'm trying to get at...what I personally feel the problem in this situation is this:
when the Japanese are mourning the death of innocent people, there are people with the attitude 'they deserved it' - this is the kind of attitude I really...dislike. On a day of mourning, is it right to point fingers at people, and blame them or try justify your own actions by comparing them to theirs? that kind of thinking is cruel, it's wrong, I believe it needs to change. the attitude behind that thinking is what I believe drags people back - leaves them clinging to the past, hate, etc. The memorial day for bombing of Hiroshima is to remember and honour the innocent people who died. It's not a "America was horrible" or "Japan deserved it" moment. I feel it really serves as a reminder to us who the true enemy is: and to quote a US soldier who had made a statement to a japanese civilian... "You are not my enemy - war is."

Both sides committed atrocities. The Japanese definitely did. As did America. I'm not denying any of those facts at all. I'm not blaming America, I'm not blaming Japan. This blaming game, whether against each other or against ourselves doesnt help anyone. People can spend too long trying to blame the other - and this is one thing (that I feel) that prevents us all from working together, from striving to make changes for the better.

what Im hoping is that the anger, resentment, hatred towards each other will stop - and the only way I can see this happening is if people forgive (I mean everyone. Both sides. not referring to one...), I'm hoping attitudes like this will change so we can work together and prevent something like this from ever happening ever again, to prevent history from repeating itself...

of course, this picture is just my own opinion - i'm only wanting to make people think a bit, I'm not here to force it on others
(copy-pasta'd from a comment I made, because Im too tired to repeat myself. xDD sorry)


EDIT 2: re:# note

this comment was made by someone (an American I think) when the "their loss was nothing compared to ours" kind of statement came into play at some point...So my point is this: it is cruel to say that people "deserved to die", and try to overlook the fact that innocent lives were lost from this act...Comparing whose actions were "more horrific" does not somehow justify that the loss of these lives 'is nothing to mourn about', or the deaths of these people should not be honoured (which is what a few of the comments were getting at). I apologise greatly for not providing the context to which the top quote was in; so it makes it sound like I was trying to shift the blame. I cant emphasise this enough - it is not my intention to do so...

and if it's of any relevance - (judging from a few comments, I have a feeling I may sound like I'm writing from the perspective of a Japanese person) I grew up in New Zealand (kiwi for life!); my parents are Taiwanese; my late Grandfather was Chinese(by descent)-Taiwanese, and always held a grudge towards the Japanese for what he experienced in WW2...Though I definitely felt hurt every time he looked sorrowful or angry at the recollection of his experiences and suffering, (and honestly, I felt angry myself at some stage) I decided not to let this influence what I should feel towards the Japanese people due to what was inflicted on my grandfather in the past and try to forgive. I am not disregarding my grandfather's suffering - if anything, I am extremely grateful that I am where I am today because of his efforts and his struggles to support his family and survive through crisis. But I want to end the bitterness that has somehow been passed onto the current generation (my father especially; is still somewhat bitter as well...) ...

Once again, I am just one person. I'm not speaking up for any country (as in, I'm not pro-'insert country here'; anti-"insert country here"). Please, if my comments offend you in some manner, I ask that you don't attribute my thoughts/opinion to either of the countries' people:</u> it would seriously break my heart if I knew someone suddenly felt angered towards either country because of what I wrote/ drew. So please, if anything, keep in mind these are the remarks of one person (who usually would not post anything like this because she finds it impossible to word her opinions/thoughts in a coherent fashion).
Add a Comment:
 
love 13 13 joy 1 1 wow 0 0 mad 0 0 sad 5 5 fear 0 0 neutral 0 0
:iconxxheartlessgirlxx:
~xXHeartlessGirlXx 4 days ago  New member Hobbyist General Artist
As my great grandfather said, "Tá Life ar Mystery. Is é ceann de na mysteries mór an croí duine."
Translated: Life is a mystery. One of the greatest mysteries is the human heart.
And it is true, just like you show with feeling in this piece, no one believes what Irish had to go through. Say we had nothing, or my dad, Korean had nothing to went through. Everyone, every generation, every race has to go through some things. :) Only same thing on positive sides, we all make it through eventually.
Reply
:icondreaming-absolution:
~Dreaming-Absolution Aug 24, 2012  Hobbyist General Artist
I send many love vibes~
I can't really put to words how I feel about WW2, mainly because I just want to blame Hitler for it all~ But that's not right either, because it's not entirely true, especially when you see that some of the beginnings for WW2 started with how the people who won WW1 handled the losers.
Whats sad about that is that Woodrow Wilson tried to help the losers, because he knew something bad would happen(though, he might not have though another World War would have started) if someone didn't do something to help. But everyone else was like...NO. I that makes me go....morons.
AGH.
-ahem-
Now, I'm going to go and hide in my ameripan shrine...see you~
Reply
:iconeirthbndr:
I don't think the Japanese deserved the bombings, but I do think they were necessary to end the war. The Japanese culture is stubborn and proud, and that is something that I admire, and it really showed itself in WWII, what with the kamakazee (yeah no idea how to spell that) and all. In a desperate attempt to end the war - and to assert our power - America dropped the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I think it was tragic, but necessary.

As a side note - we spent years and tons of money rebuilding Japan, so we did feel bad for what we did.
Reply
:icondino-blankey:
~Dino-blankey Jul 18, 2012  Student Artist
Awwww...I love this.
Reply
:iconseremia:
Mood: Love ~Seremia Jun 26, 2012  Hobbyist Traditional Artist
I absolutely love this idea.
As long as people won't change their attitude, there will be no forgiving and if that is the case, hatred will never cease. Your picture is a step forward to open their eyes.
Would you mind if I reblog your picture in tumblr? (With a link to this picture and your account)
I really want them to see their mistake in blaming one another and I'd love to spread your great picture and this very nice comment you wrote below.
I would really like more people to aknowledge this idea. :heart:
Greetings! :wave:
Reply
:iconeternalempress:
~EternalEmpress May 26, 2012  Hobbyist Writer
This is beautiful. An art that teaches people to love and not to hate.

History is made to teach people the events that shook millions of lives and killed innocent people. For me, history is a life lesson that is embraced for all eternity. It teaches people not to do these sinful deeds again, however, some do not embrace this life lesson.

Many of my classmates are ignorant of history. Some of my fellow Filipinos still hate the Japanese for invading it, but did they even like the invasion? Did they like making people suffer?

It hurt me to see people hating each other because of what happened before. It hurt me to see people hating each other. It hurt me to see hatred.

I want my family to see that Japan had changed, every country had changed. I want them to see the dark history of everyone and understand why it happened. I want them to respect and understand each others sides and see their loves during the horrific events.

I just want people to understand. I want hatred to be gone. If hatred will be gone, then peace will exist forever.
Reply
:iconexclusivelyhetalia:
~ExclusivelyHetalia May 21, 2012  Hobbyist Traditional Artist
Rock on my friend.... Rock on.....
Reply
:icondinosaurusgede:
Mood: Sympathy ~dinosaurusgede May 19, 2012  Hobbyist Traditional Artist
Thank you so much for making this. You thaught me that forgiveness is possible. we have to face the blame and learn from those mistakes in the past than try to move on.
I hope the goverment and people in power would learn from these and stop making and seeding hatred through wars, we had enough of Wars. To US government, stop waging war with other countries and to Japan goverment, please apologize for the invasion in WW2, and to former colonial country, please apologize for the invasions of our country after Japan left.
Reply
:iconaniyushadow:
I love this, it's beautiful and it sums up how I feel about wars in general. Incidentally, I quoted some of these lines to my dad (without realizing it) when he and I got into an argument about one of my history reports years ago. He's a soldier and while he doesn't like wars, he feels little to no sympathy to another country's people when both sides are suffering. I'm no soldier (WAAAAAYYYY too emotional to be one) and while I can understand why wars happen and for what reasons (with lots of research into both sides; otherwise you just get a biased view of the victor's side), I believe no one should force others to suffer like that.

I'm of the opinion that we are human: there will always be some kind of conflict (whether minor or on a war scale), but that doesn't mean we can't learn to forgive and live with each other afterward. If we can make conflict and war, we can also make peace and cooperation. It doesn't have to be easy, it SHOULDN'T be easy, but we can do it with effort.

Ahem, okay, stepping off my soapbox now. As I said, this is beautiful and I think it suits Japan's and America's personalities well. I kinda wish Germany and Italy (mostly Germany though) could be in this too, but it's wonderful either way. What actually stands out to me the most is the over al color palate of the picture; the light tones remind me of the early hours of dawn, and makes me think of new beginnings.
Reply
:iconnatsumigotattitude:
This Was so powerful for me Because I've been hurt and bitter towards someone for so long now, and Reading this, and the words in the description just Melted my Heart. It gives me something to remember...Thank you! You Unintentionally helped me!
Reply
Add a Comment: