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Japanese Asked to Apologize over WWII Sinking of Hospital Ship

Written By: guyjin on January 11, 2010 48 Comments

In late December last year, shipwreck hunters discovered the wreck of the AHS Centaur, an Australian Hospital Ship that was sunk by a Japanese submarine off the coast of Queensland in 1943. Not much is generally known by most Japanese people that I have come across about fighting between the Japanese and Australians during WWII. Some are vaguely aware of Australian involvement in the war, but I haven’t met many people that are aware that the Japanese forces came so close to Australia (including the bombing of Darwin in 1942, still the largest foreign attack on Australian soil,  and almost 100 air raids throughout WWII).

 

AHS_Centaur

 

The Centaur was converted in early 1943 into a hospital ship, which should have allowed it free passage under the terms of the 1907 Hague Convention. But just months after its conversion to service as a hospital ship it was torpedoed by a Japanese submarine. Only 64 of the 332 people on board survived, and the attack sparked outrage at the time in Australia. The attack was considered a war crime under international conventions, but no one was ever tried for the crime. Part of the reason for this was the difficulty in proving which submarine had actually made the attack. Most believe it to have been the I-177, captained by Nakagawa Hajime, and this was confirmed in the official history of the Japanese navy. Nakagawa died in 1991. The wreck was not found until last month.

 

Immediately following news of the finding of the wreck, a statement from Australia’s acting Prime Minister, Julia Gillard reportedly said:

 

“The discovery of the AHS Centaur will ensure all Australians know and commemorate the 268 brave nurses and crew who died in the service of their nation.”

 

$4 million had been set aside for the search, and filming of the wreck has recently begun. Pictures of the underwater ship show clear markings of a large red cross, as dictated by the conventions that should have protected it. There are three main theories as to why the ship may have been attacked. Either the ship was believed to be a legitimate target, the captain had been unaware that the Centaur was a hospital ship, or the Japanese sub had knowingly attacked a protected ship. The two former theories are believed to hold little water, due to the fact that the Centaur was clearly marked and would have been identifiable from the direction in which the attack had come.

 

Yesterday Queensland’s acting Premier, Paul Lucas said:

 

“… Whilst the Japanese have certainly apologized for their actions during the Second World War, it would be appropriate for those involved to express an apology… In this barbaric act, people lost their lives. Sailors, soldiers, nurses, doctors, orderlies. It was a totally senseless and wanton act. Terrible things happen in war, but on the scale of things this would have to be amongst the worst.”

 

I’m not the type to call for apologies at the drop of a hat, but more than apologies I just think that there needs to be a little more recognition and understanding in Japan about some of the things that happened in WWII. Actually, it’s not really a ‘Japan-only’ problem. So many people these days are ignorant of historical perspective. I am certainly not a WWII scholar myself, and there is plenty that I could learn about what went on as well.

 

Speaking of Japan in particular, since that is what this blog is about, I do feel that there is a general feeling of ‘war is bad’ throughout the population, without anything like a real understanding of just what war IS, or WHY they think it is bad. Nor is there sufficient understanding of crimes committed by Japanese soldiers in the course of wars in the early and mid 20th centuries, when many current Japanese citizens were alive.

 

I’m not trying to bash Japan, and nor do I agree with the ‘war is bad no matter what’ mantra. But I can certainly understand why someone might say something like that. I hate the idea of war too. But I think there has been far too much painting with a broad brush, and far too few attempts in Japanese society as a whole to really understand war, along with both reasons for and against it. I don’t mind a society deciding that they don’t want anything to do with war, or fighting. If that is their desire, they are welcome to make that decision. But when the decision is made from a position of naivety and ignorance, without having truly debated the ins and outs, this can cause lots of problems.

 

It’s not like there hasn’t been any debate at all about WWII in particular in Japan, and about the constitution that was given to this country as a result of their capitulation at the end of the war. But I believe that the concept of war and fighting in Japan has become so clinical that it is now devoid of any of the individual acts of barbarism that were a part of the Japanese war experience. Many other countries that have fought and died in wars have had these discussions, about the cost of war, and about some of the horrors that can result. These horrors even apply to a force that may be in the right who are battling to protect a cause that is worthy. Many nations have had this debate, and have decided, on the balance, that some causes are worth the cost – and others are not. I don’t believe that Japan has yet fully satisfied the ‘informed consent’ rule for declaring war out of bounds, or for declaring that it is a possible tool in some circumstances. For me, it’s not a question of apologies. I am far more interested in understanding, recognition, and an informed people that make sound judgments as opposed to emotional reactions…

 

Sources:

AHS Centaur – Wikipedia

Japanese ’should apologize for Centaur’

Centaur found off coast of QLD



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48 Responses to “Japanese Asked to Apologize over WWII Sinking of Hospital Ship”

  1. arai akemi says on: 12 January 2010 at 11:41 am

    Have you heard of Amerika-maru, Awa-maru, Tsushima-maru, Akagi-maru, Konan-maru?

  2. guyjin says on: 12 January 2010 at 1:14 pm

    Yes. The point of my story was not to suggest that during WWII one side was perfect and the other made no mistakes. There are tragedies on both sides in war, and as I said in my article, I do not believe that asking for an apology from Japan serves any purpose now. Rather we should learn more about what happened, and why. There are some causes that I believe are worth fighting for, in spite of the consequences, but others that are not.

    It should be noted too that in the majority of the examples you have cited here, these Japanese ships that were sunk with civilians on board were either not marked, or were moving in convoy with other war ships, or were believed to be carrying large amounts of treasures of war. This was not the case with the Centaur.

  3. arai akemi says on: 13 January 2010 at 2:50 pm

    We were taught that we were wrong.
    You were taught you fought for some cause worth fighting for.

  4. Espejo10 says on: 30 January 2010 at 6:41 am

    I just picked up on this interesting discussion. Both Americans and Japanese fought an unbelievably ferocious and extremely brutal war in the Pacific. Both sides apparently routinely killed wounded rather than take prisoners and some barbaric mutilation of the dead was practiced by both sides. In the course of writing an historical fiction novel with characters on both sides, I have been wrestling with the paradox of Japanese brutality toward civilians and POWs. It doesn’t appear that Americans shared that sort of activity. Of course, not just Hiroshima & Nagasaki, but the extensive firebombing of civilians from March to August of 1945 may be one of the greatest atrocities that doesn’t seem to be in American consciousness today.

  5. K-gerage says on: 17 March 2010 at 1:28 am

    So far I’ve never met a Japanese who was aware of their countries crimes. Most are more than willing to call America a monster for dropping the A-bomb but I haven’t met one that was aware of the Japanese killing 10-15 million Asian civilians during the course of the war, the biological experiments, 25% allied Pow death rate none of it. It’s like everyday Berliners have to walk by tons of memorials all a reminder of their crimes, whereas the Japanese just forget and assume they didn’t do anything wrong.

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