
Hiroshima’s Transformation from Military Center to Symbol of Peace and Tool of Diplomacy
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Presenting a New Face for Hiroshima
Hiroshima will bask in the global spotlight in April 2016. That is when it will host a meeting of the foreign ministers of the Group of Seven. The diplomats will gather in Hiroshima in advance of the Shima Summit of G7 leaders, which will take place in May. Hiroshima would be an excellent venue to take up the issue of nuclear disarmament. But the municipal and prefectural officials will also be eager to take the opportunity to draw attention to another Hiroshima story.
Highlighting Hiroshima’s vitality as a city reborn has become a priority for the municipal and prefectural governments. The city and prefecture have issued a series of multilingual materials to convey the tale of Hiroshima’s revitalization to a global audience. Those materials reflect a studied decision to position Hiroshima as a fount of peace-building insight for nations emerging from conflict.
I have had the opportunity to verify personally the value of the Hiroshima experience in steering nations’ post-conflict recovery. For more than 10 years, I have participated in training programs for government officials from nations recently afflicted by conflict. The programs have taken place under the auspices of the Japan International Cooperation Agency and Japan’s foreign ministry.
In my work with the trainees, I have drawn extensively on the history of Hiroshima and of Japan. I have produced textbooks, photo albums, and DVDs and used those materials at workshops in Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Sudan, Sierra Leone, Liberia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Japanese understanding of Hiroshima in a historical and political context suffers from unfounded perceptions of the city as a hotbed of leftism. Hiroshima’s role as a poster child of the nuclear-disarmament movement has invited wrong assumptions about the city’s politics. That is a vestige of Cold War–era associations of pacifism with leftism. In fact, Hiroshima’s voters lean toward the conservative side of the political spectrum.
A new awareness of Hiroshima is taking hold in Japan as the Cold War fades into history. Japanese are increasingly prone to regard the city as an example of the potential for nurturing peace worldwide, and a symbol of a Japanese pacifism that transcends politics. The emergence of more objective perceptions of Hiroshima has fortified the city’s standing as a center of international peace studies. Going to Hiroshima has become an entirely natural step for scholars, government officials, and other persons interested in that field.
Two Recurring Questions for Survivors
As Hiroshima attracts a growing and multinational stream of visitors, we Japanese need to hone our capacity for explaining the city’s significance. Japanese are prone not to consider it too deeply, simply thinking, “Well, they dropped an atomic bomb there, so it became a peace city.” The natural conclusion, then, is that dropping atomic bombs on a series of cities would produce “peace cities” in the same mold as Hiroshima. Treating foreign visitors to the foregoing sort of explanation will simply expose the Japanese hosts’ ignorance of their own nation.
Hiroshima can and ought to be a valuable intellectual asset and diplomatic tool, a point of reference for explaining Japan’s pacifism and for examining perceptions of twentieth-century history. As Japanese, let us welcome this opportunity to refine our descriptive skills.
The most basic questions that foreigners commonly ask about Hiroshima defy easy response. Yet we can ill afford to skirt those questions if we would engage in meaningful discourse. The most common question asked by foreign visitors of Hiroshima’s survivors of the atomic bombing: “Don’t you hate Americans? How can you hide under the US security umbrella after what the Americans did here?” And the second most common question: “We can see that people suffered here, but what of the suffering that Japan inflicted on people elsewhere?”
Answering the first question entails addressing the question of Japanese’s sense of solidarity with peoples afflicted by present-day conflicts. To simply shrug off the question with an “I don’t know” is to reveal an appalling apathy. Conversely, to tackle the question sincerely and to engage in serious discussion or even debate with the questioner is to deepen our nation’s involvement with the world.
Implicit in the second question is the suspicion that Japanese have compromised their Asian relations by focusing on their victimization while ignoring their transgressions. To simply reject that suspicion out of hand is to abort the potential for dialogue between Japan and its Asian neighbors. Conversely, to inaugurate a discussion about the difficulty of coming to terms with the past and to augment the discussion with the example of Hiroshima is to deepen mutual understanding.
Rebirth as a Peace Icon
Most of the Japanese soldiers dispatched to fight in the Sino-Japanese War (1894–1895) and in the Russo-Japanese War (1904–1905) embarked from Hiroshima Port, then known as Ujina Port. During the Sino-Japanese War, Hiroshima was home to the Japanese military headquarters. Even the emperor resided in the city for more than eighteen months during that span, and Japan’s parliament convened there in temporary quarters.
The military presence in Hiroshima occasioned the development of arms manufacturing. Several prominent manufacturers headquartered in Hiroshima, such as Mazda, were formerly active in making arms.
Hiroshima’s postwar rebirth was thus more than the rebuilding of a city that had been leveled by an atomic bomb. It was a fundamental transformation of the city’s identity from military center to peace icon. Credit for conceiving and engineering that transformation goes to Hamai Shinzō (1905–1968), Hiroshima’s first popularly elected mayor (served 1947–1955 and 1959–1967).
Hamai secured approval for his idea from General Douglas MacArthur, the head of the Allied occupation forces, and garnered support from members of parliament. He succeeded in winning parliamentary passage of the Hiroshima Peace Memorial City Construction Act in 1949. Hiroshima’s annual Peace Memorial Ceremony and its site, the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park, owe their names to that legislation.
The mayor was less successful in selling the idea to his electorate, and his idealism cost him his job in the election of 1955. Hamai continued to promote his ideals while out of office, however, and earned enough support to regain the mayoralty in 1959.
Hiroshima has been forged into a peace city through the sweat of years of efforts, and in the face of major contradictions and apprehensions. Appreciating this fact is fundamental to talking meaningfully about Hiroshima as a symbol of Japanese pacifism and a universal example of recovery.
(Originally written in Japanese on August 10 and published on August 14, 2015. Banner photo: Floating lanterns drift on the Motoyasugawa river beside the Hiroshima Peace Memorial on August 6, 2015, invoking thoughts for the nuclear victims and prayers for lasting peace. © Jiji.)Related Tags
Abe Shinzō Hiroshima Caroline Kennedy atomic bombing Hiroshima Peace Memorial Douglas MacArthur pacifism