Able-bodied
Korean men were shipped out to the Japanese archipelago to work in the mines and
factories there during WW II. Read these
first-person accounts by others who was there, a Japanese high school
student who were also dispatched, together with his entire class, to work
alongside the Korean men in iron mines. The two groups did work
together in the open pit mine, and did engage in some fraternizing. However,
at the underground mine, it was the Koreans
who unhappily worked in the shafts, while the students
worked aboveground transporting the ore.
The
Koreans differed from the students in two other ways. First, they received
wages. Koreans acknowledged this in the
lawsuits, where the plaintiffs demanded unpaid back wages, among other
things. Second, they had an out. They could volunteer to serve in the Imperial
Army; after all, they were Japanese citizens. Not many did, of course, as the small
number of ethnic Koreans enshrined in Yasukuni attests. This also meant,
though, that they were better off than the typical able-bodied Japanese-Japanese
male, who, if given the choice, would surely have elected to serve the war
effort from behind.
How
were working conditions like for the Koreans? If the open-pit and underground
narratives are any indication, they varied significantly with the circumstances—just
like the experiences of the soldiers in the Imperial Army. In one example chronicled
by the dreaded Special Police of all
people, 292 of the 383 Koreans who had been conscripted to work in a nickel
mine had run away. The officer making the report complained that the Koreans
were being taken in by Japanese businesses, who apparently were offering better
working conditions than the mine.
And
where there are war efforts and able-bodied males, there are bound to be “comfort
women”; the Japanese mines and factories were no exception. Perhaps the high
school students were too naïve to notice, but a pro-Korean advocacy web site takes note of their existence
on two occasions, 40 Korean women and three Japanese women respectively, both apparently
servicing Korean laborers.
I’ll
leave it at that for now.
3 comments:
And your point is what?
Korean forced laborers also worked alongside Allied POWs and Chinese POWs. The companies were supposed to pay them, but rarely did. The money either stayed with the company or was deposited into Postal Savings. No one has ever been able to withdraw their funds. Now there are exact records. Each company kept them. Ask Deputy PM Aso, as the Japanese government found all the Aso Mining docs. And the Comfort Women were trafficked to companies as well as to the military. War production was carefully managed by the military. All this was called something else then, but today there is a terminology. BTW Japan did sign the Convention against the slave trade, thus trafficking was illegal in Japan even though prostitution was not.
Wait I think I got your point..."thems' our bitches" so we can do what we want.
Don't worry, AA, I'll spell it out clearly even for people like you--and there are many--but not now. There will be a time and place for that.
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