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    Japan
     Apr 9, 2008
Page 1 of 2
Lost love over Yasukuni Shrine
By David McNeill

TOKYO - Neo-nationalists have shut down a Chinese-directed movie about Japan's controversial war memorial Yasukuni, the latest in a string of incidents threatening freedom of expression in Japan.

Its name translates as "peaceful country", millions have silently prayed there for an end to wars, and for much of the year the loudest sound is the buzzing of insects and the shuffle of old footsteps to the hushed main hall. Yet Yasukuni Shrine, which occupies a single square kilometer of central Tokyo, is one of the most controversial pieces of real estate in Asia, resented by millions who consider it a monument to war, empire, and Japan's unrepentant and undigested militarism.

A decade ago when Chinese director Li Ying began filming there

 

he didn't know what to make of his mysterious subject either. Today, as he watches the official Tokyo launch of his two-hour movie Yasukuni go down in flames amid death threats and canceled screenings, he says the shrine symbolizes a "disease of the spirit" in Japan. "That I haven't been able to leave this issue alone for the last 10 years means that I too am suffering," explained the 44-year-old Guangdong native.

"I didn't really want to make such a difficult film ... so I must be sick to do it. The point is to look directly at the disease."

Li's point appears to have been lost by Japanese conservatives, who have branded the movie "Chinese propaganda", and condemned a decision by the Agency for Cultural Affairs of Japan to award Li a 7.5 million yen (US$75,000) grant. In March, the film's distributors were forced to give a private preview to 80 lawmakers after weekly tabloids launched a campaign against the decision to fund it. With criticism growing along with the threat of ultra-right-wing violence, four Tokyo cinemas have pulled out of an official launch on April 12. Will the documentary ever flicker on Japan's movie screens? As of April 6, in the wake of the cancelations, several cinemas have announced they intend to screen the documentary.

The campaign against the movie is led by powerful Liberal Democrat (LDP) lawmaker Inada Tomomi, who says it is guilty of "political propaganda". "I felt the movie's ideological message was that 'Yasukuni' was a device to drive people into an aggressive war", she told the Asahi newspaper after the screening, but denied she wanted it banned. "I have no interest in limiting freedom of expression or restricting the showing of the movie. My doubt is about the movie's political intentions."

Inada can be seen in Li's documentary speaking at the shrine on the 60th anniversary of Japan's surrender, August 15, 2005. "We are committed to rebuilding a proud Japan, where the prime minister can openly worship at Yasukuni," she tells the crowd. "We will devote ourselves to speeding the day when the emperor too can worship here."

Inada is a leading historical revisionist and right-wing webcaster Sakura Channel lists her as a supporter of its movie The Truth of Nanjing, which argues that the 1937 rape of the old Chinese capital by Japanese Imperial troops is a lie. She helped lead a lawsuit against novelist Oe Kenzaburo, who angered neo-nationalists by writing about the military's role in forcing civilians to kill themselves during the 1945 Battle of Okinawa.

In this instance, however, the court has just exonerated Oe. She is a signatory to a now famous 2007 Washington Post advertisement arguing that the sexual enslavement of thousands of Asian women had no basis in fact, and a member of a parliamentary group fighting against what it sees as "masochistic" teaching of history in the nation's high schools.

In a now familiar pattern, ultra-nationalists who follow in the shadow of establishment politicians threatened retribution against anyone who handled the movie. Anonymous bloggers posted contact details for the distribution company, the Japan Arts Council, and every theatre showing it. Anonymous death threats have been issued against Dragon Films, the company that produced Yasukuni.

The burying of Li's film follows a string of similar incidents. In February, Tokyo's Grand Prince Hotel New Takanawa canceled a conference by the Japan Teachers' Union - a popular ultra-right target - after learning that 100 right-wing sound trucks turned up to last year's conference venue. The hotel's decision has been bitterly attacked by union officials. Fear of intimidation ensures that there are still no Japan screenings planned for any of the dozen or so foreign movies made to commemorate the anniversary of the 1937 Nanjing Massacre by the Imperial Japanese Army.

Scholars have also lined up to criticize a government decision that they say effectively refused to allow Italian scholar Antonio Negri to enter the country last month. Negri, an anti-globalization activist and philosopher who served a prison sentence in Italy on controversial charges of "insurrection against the state", had been scheduled to give a series of lectures at the universities of Tokyo and Kyoto. He was forced to abruptly cancel his trip after being told he would need a permit to entry the country.

"My sense is that we have entered a very dangerous period for freedom of expression and press freedom in this country," says Tajima Yasuhiko, a professor of journalism in Tokyo's Sophia University. "That is the background to these cases. The idea that people are entitled to express different opinions and views is withering. That should be common sense, whether one is on the left or the right."

Why was the movie canned? The cinemas say they were disturbed by right-wing threats and the possibility of "trouble", particularly during the first days of screening. "We very much regret canceling the documentary but we felt we had no choice after considering the safety of our customers," explains Murayama Yaseyuki, a spokesman for Q-AX Cinema in Shibuya. But director Li rejects these claims and says only political pressure explains the sudden decision by all four Tokyo cinemas to pull the plug.

"Before the movie was released I visited the theaters and talked to the managers," he says on the phone from China. "Some magazines had already started discussing the movie, so we knew that there would be some protests. There was a very strong sense among everyone then of wanting to put this movie out and challenge the protesters. So why have they all suddenly changed their mind? I can only conclude that pressure was exerted behind the scenes."

Japan has been here many times before. Few Japanese have seen Matsui Minoru's 2001 movie Japanese Devils, or Paul Schrader's 1985 art-house cinematic tribute to Yukio Mishima because of right-wing protests. How many Japanese viewers will ever see the dozen or so movies made to commemorate the 1937 Nanjing Massacre over the past two years in Europe, North America and China? The pattern is often the same: the movies pick at the scabs of Japan's war history, conservative politicians express "concern" and the ultra-right goes into battle because, well, that's what they do.

"Politicians know that when they make pronouncements about these issues that we will take action," says Takahashi Yoshisada, who heads a Tokyo-based ultra-nationalist group. Like most other ultra-nationalists, including the group that first spooked the Ginza Cinepathos movie theater with a visit in March, Takahashi has not seen Yasukuni, only heard about it from people like Inada. "They talk, we protest. They know this because it has happened many times in the past. In that sense, I think the politicians are using us."

In a recent press conference to foreign reporters in Tokyo, Councilor Inada defended her criticism of Li's movie. "Wouldn't China have a problem if a Japanese company [funded by tax money] in China created a film conveying the message of the Dalai Lama?" But the comparison is rejected by Professor Tajima. "Liberal democratic nations are not afraid of some criticism. Expecting everyone to just cheer on the country and cooperate with the government is more like North Korea or the situation in Tibet."

Speaking at the Foreign Press Club, veteran Japan commentator and Keizai University professor Andrew Horvat said the debate about Li's movie worried Japan's friends as much as its enemies. "I'm afraid that Japan's reputation as a democratic country will come under scrutiny." But conservatives have cheered the cancelation of the screenings. "Our tax money should be not spent to support a film that expresses an anti-Japan ideology," wrote one right-wing blogger. "This is just common sense."

The controversy over the Yasukuni Shrine is not difficult to understand. Among the 2.46 million war dead commemorated there, there are over 1,000 war criminals, including the men who led Japan's brutal pillage of Asia. A museum on the shrine's grounds audaciously rewrites history: teenage suicide bombers (kamikaze) are heroes, America is the enemy and the emperor, supposedly reduced to mortal status after World War II, is still a deity. The Shinto officials who run the shrine believe they are protecting the "soul of Japan".

Li's cinematic gaze is unflinching, and sometimes disturbing. In one scene, filmed on the 60th anniversary of Japan's World War II surrender, August 15, 2005, two young anti-Yasukuni protesters are beaten and chased from the shrine's grounds by right-wingers who yell at them to "go back to China". The protesters, who are Japanese, are later hauled off by the police. Archive shots show Japanese soldiers using Yasukuni swords, forged in the grounds from 1933-1945, to decapitate Chinese victims.

But much of the movie, which is narration free, unobtrusively explores the conflicting sentiments provoked by the memorial among ordinary Japanese: from the two older women who recall the battlefield deaths of relatives and who want the prime minister to pay his respects, to the Buddhist priest who resents the fact that his father's soul has been enshrined there against his will. The movie is hinged around the work of the shrine's last remaining sword-maker, Kariya Naoji, a gentle craftsman who offers few insights into how he helped forge the 8,100 swords that ended up on the battlefield.

Li, who moved to Tokyo in 1989 and speaks fluent Japanese, rejects claims that he is anti-Japanese and describes his movie as a "love letter" to the Japanese people. "I live in Japan. How could something that is anti-Japanese be good for me, personally? This love letter may be hard to watch, but that's the form my love takes." He says he was motivated to start making the movie a decade ago by the shock of listening to Japanese revisionists at a conference on the Nanjing Massacre. "When it comes to history, there's a gap that's so large."

Interview with Li Ying
John Junkerman, an American documentary filmmaker based in Tokyo, interviews the Li Ying, the Chinese director of the two-hour documentary Yasukuni

(Note: This interview was conducted on March 10, several weeks before theaters in Tokyo decided to cancel their screening of the film.)

John Junkerman: Who is the Diet member who has raised objections to the film?

Li Ying: Inada Tomomi is a very famous lawyer. She was involved in the court case over the "Hyakunin-giri" affair [the 1937 contest between two Japanese officers to be the first to behead 100 Chinese] and in the suit against Oe Kenzaburo, regarding mass suicides in Okinawa. She's got very powerful backers. An ordinary Diet member would not be able to get the Agency for Cultural Affairs to take action. So it's intimidating. And now she's influencing people around her. It's a month until the film opens, and she can make things difficult for us. We don't really care if she threatens us personally, we're prepared for that, but it's the theaters we're worried about.

The theaters are taking out insurance, increasing security. And the other concern is that people who appear in the film might be threatened. The other day I met with Kariya Naoji [the Yasukuni swordsmith featured in the film] and he mentioned that he'd seen reports that it was an anti-Japanese film. He doesn't think so himself, but it could be a problem if he hears that from other people.

JJ: What motivated you to breach the taboo and make a film about Yasukuni?

Yasukuni and the Nanjing Massacre
LY: It was Nanking. Some years ago, I was thinking about making a film on Nanking. In speaking with Japanese, of course there is always a gap in the perception of history. And the gap surrounding Nanking is the widest. So I was interested in Nanking and in 1997 I attended a symposium at Kudan Kaikan in Tokyo on the 60th anniversary of Nanking. The first event of the symposium was the screening of a documentary about Nanking. It was a propaganda film produced by the Japanese military, and of course it didn't touch on the massacre at all. There was a scene of the formal ceremony of the Japanese military entering the city. And something happened that I couldn't believe. The audience applauded, very loudly. It was a shock. It left me shaking. I couldn't believe it. I felt like I was standing on a battlefield.

It was a shock to experience such a scene, here in Japan so many years after the war. It's unthinkable, that people still feel a sense of honor and pride toward such a scene. This is not simply a typical right-wing problem. It far surpassed what I understood to be the right wing. Kudan Kaikan is a fancy venue, and there were more than a thousand people, all wearing suits and ties. University of Tokyo professors, members of the Atarashii Kyokasho o Tsukuru Kai [Japanese Society for History Textbook Reform]. There are those in Japan who have documented the massacre, and there are those who deny it. It was the deniers who were participating in this symposium. And what is their position? They dismiss the testimony of those who were in Nanking, and argue instead that the massacre never happened. There's no possibility of discussing it with them.

At the symposium, the daughter of one of the officers who engaged in the beheading contest appealed for the restoration of her father's honor, that he be treated not as a war criminal but as a heroic soul in Yasukuni. So that made me wonder what Yasukuni symbolized, this sacred space that granted heroic status. This was an issue that had a greater sense of reality. Nanking is a historical problem, but to take up an issue that carries reality, you need to film in Japan, and that meant filming Yasukuni, to bring the issue into present reality. Yasukuni feels very real to me. So I began filming then and continued for 10 years. I didn't know what kind of film it would turn out to be. I decided I would just film every time I went to Yasukuni. As I filmed I would study and learn more, and figure it out. That's a very time-consuming process, to start filming without knowing what kind of film it will turn out to be. But I had a sense that it raised very real issues.

JJ: Did people try to prevent you from filming?

Preventing the filming of Yasukuni
LY: My camera was taken away, videotape was taken, I was told 

Continued 1 2 


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