There Were Children on the Battleground: Japanese and Filipino Youth in the Second World War: Education In Japan During the War
Array
(
[0] =>
)
Jump to...
Education in Japan During the War
This photograph is from the October 25, 1939 edition of the Photographic Weekly Report (Shashin Shuho), which was a weekly pictorial journal published by the Japanese Cabinet Intelligence Department during the interwar years of 1938-1945. This magazine functioned as propaganda that the Japanese government used to shape public moral for the war. The caption translates to: "These toddlers and kindergarteners form a motley squad, but the drill sergeant, who likes children teaches them the proper way to salute. 'Uncle, how is this?'"
(Translation from: David C. Earhart, ed., "Certain Victory: Images of World War II in the Japanese Media" (Armonk, NE: M.E. Sharpe, 2008), 192)
(Courtesy of Jacar)
"Labeled Sixth Rank for Being Bad" is a personal account by Sato Rakuro published in Senso: The Japanese Remember the Pacific War. Originally, this personal account was a letter to the editor of the Asahi Newspaper in Japan between 1986-1987. The Asahi had requested the war experiences of all of it readers. This letter provides a glimpse of a student's perspective of their war-time education.
[click the image to enlarge; click the image again to browse all pages]
(Courtesy of M.E. Sharpe)
During World War II, the Japanese government attempted to indoctrinate Japanese children through education and propaganda. Both methods nationalized youth and encouraged them to support the war effort. Youth were expected to volunteer in factories and farms to replace the conscripted labor force.[1] Leading up to World War II, Japanese schools became more militaristic and nationalistic. In 1940, elementary schools were renamed “Citizen’s Schools.”[2] Textbooks became vivid, engaging, and militaristic picture-books. For science, teachers trained children in agriculture so they could better assist in food production for the nation. Youth helped raise war morale by sending comfort letters, drawings, and packages to soldiers.[3] Some even participated in warfare by creating balloon bombs which would float over the Pacific and target the west coast of the United States.[4]
Japan’s War-time Evacuation Schools
This photograph is from the August 6, 1941 edition of the Photographic Weekly Report (Shashin Shuho), which was a weekly pictorial journal published by the Japanese Cabinet Intelligence Department during the interwar years of 1938-1945. This magazine functioned as propaganda that the Japanese government used to shape public moral for the war. This picture shows shirtless Japanese girls participating in a physical fitness routine at school during the summer.
[Click the image for a translation of the image caption]
(Courtesy of Jacar)
Another way indoctrination occurred was through the evacuation of Japanese elementary children in the Spring of 1944. The goal of this action was not only to protect children from air-raids, but also to make good Japanese citizens.[5] In the makeshift countryside schools, Teachers asked children—who were isolated from their parents—to keep diaries to record their impressions while at the schools. Children were inspired by the things they learned and bonded with their teachers. When the military conscripted Nakane Mihoko’s teacher, Mihoko recalled that she was sad but had “happy feelings when [she] thought about Ishida-sensei’s going to war for the sake of the country.”[6] Children were also trained in hand-to-hand combat and national values which consisted of putting the state above the individual.[7] These schools were not only preparing children to be citizens, but soldiers.
Youth’s Response to Their Education
A photograph from the March 12, 1941 edition of the Photographic Weekly Report (Shashin Shuho). The caption of this image translates to: "'Hey, Gen. Aren't you too little for that?' 'Well since you're graduating, older brother...and isn't it usual for a uniform to be too big?' Say, he's right. If it's a little too big, the tailor can make it fit."
(Translation from: David C. Earhart, ed., "Certain Victory: Images of World War II in the Japanese Media" (Armonk, NE: M.E. Sharpe, 2008), 192)
(Courtesy of Jacar)
For the most part, children were compliant and embraced their education. Children had strong confidence in the strength of their country and national government during the war.[8] Although Japanese youth could not be held responsible for the outbreak of World War II, for the most part, they believed the ideas that their parents, teachers, and leaders taught them. Sasaki Fumiko explains how she and other children bullied Korean children after the war was over. She then sorrowfully states, “The blank page of a child’s heart can be dyed any color…I recall the days when we chased Korean children, stones in hand, and my heart is pained.”[9] Youth imitated the ideas that they learned both inside and outside of school, and over time, many who were youth when the war started became soldiers by the war’s end.
Some youth even joined the military as adolescents. As the Japanese forces were fleeing as the American forces arriving, one Filipino youth remembered seeing a Japanese soldier that appeared no more than fifteen years old. The soldier was weeping and crying out “Otosan” (father). The Filipino realized he was looking for a surrogate father to comfort him. She recounts, “Speechless, I pointed to my father. Where upon the young soldier staggered towards my father, fell on his knees and cried on my father’s lap. I held his head, for he was only a boy, and wept in pity.”[10] Rather than a ruthless occupier, in this account he is first and foremost a youth.
A photograph from the March 12, 1941 edition of the Photographic Weekly Report (Shashin Shuho). This image is of high school aged student working as a fisherman. During the war years, the Japanese government conscripted Japanese children and adolescents into labor to help the nation. Schools became more focused around vocational education. The caption of this image translates to: "'Youth Are the Advance Army Shouldering Responsibility for Japan.'
(Translation from: David C. Earhart, ed., "Certain Victory: Images of World War II in the Japanese Media" (Armonk, NE: M.E. Sharpe, 2008), 192)
(Courtesy of Jacar)
A photograph from the September 15, 1943 edition of the Photographic Weekly Report (Shashin Shuho). A Japanese youth leaning next to an air plane pointing at the sky, while another youth sits in the cockpit. The Air Force Bureau began recruiting boys ages eleven through thirteen for a five year course, and ages sixteen through nineteen to began pilot training. The caption for this image translates too: "'The Sky is the Final Battlefield Flight Crew Training Center Now Recruiting Students."
(Translation from: David C. Earhart, ed., "Certain Victory: Images of World War II in the Japanese Media" (Armonk, NE: M.E. Sharpe, 2008), 202)
(Courtesy of Jacar)
"Throwing Stones at Korean Children" is a personal account by Sasaki Fumiko who was a child during World War II in Japan. She describes how as a child, she participated in throwing stones at and chasing away Korean children who were living me in Japan. This account is published in Senso: The Japanese Remember the Pacific War which is a collections of letters sent to the "Asahi Newspaper" between 1986 and 1987 that describe the homefront experiences of Japanese civilians.
(Courtesy of M.E. Sharpe)
"When I Made Balloon Bombs" is a personal account by Takamizawa Sachiko who was a child during World War II in Japan. She describes how she made balloon bombs at her public school in Japan during World War II. These balloons were designed to float across the Pacific Ocean and land on the U.S. mainland. Although a few of these bombs made their destination, they were very ineffective and did minimal damage in the U.S. This account is published in Senso: The Japanese Remember the Pacific War which is a collection of letters sent to the Asahi Newspaper between 1986 and 1987 that describe the homefront experiences of Japanese civilians.
[click the image to enlarge; click the image again to browse all pages]
(Courtesy of M.E. Sharpe)
[1] David C. Earhart, Certain Victory: Images of World War II in the Japanese Media, (New York: Routledge, 2008), 199.
[4] Takamizawa Sachiko, “When I Made Balloon Bombs,” in Sensō: The Japanese Remember the Pacific War: Letters to the Editor of Asahi Shimbun, ed. Frank Gibney and trans. Beth Cary (Armonk: M. E. Sharpe, 2007), 181-182. These balloon bombs were designed to float on the air currents over the Pacific and target West Coast and were relatively ineffective as only a small portion landed on U.S. soil. Less than ten people died from the bombs most of which did not even explode on impact.
[5] Samuel Hideo Yamashita, Daily Life in Wartime Japan, 1940- 1945 (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2015), 61.
[6] Yamashita, Daily Life in Wartime Japan, 1940- 1945, 80.
[7] Yamashita, Daily Life in Wartime Japan, 1940- 1945, 85-88.
[8] Simon Partner, Toshié: A Story of Village Life in Twentieth Century Japan, (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004), 80.
[9] Sasaki Fumiko, “Throwing Stones at Korean Children,” in Sensō,277.
[10] Helen Mendoza, “Looking Back: Day’s of War” Under Japanese Rule, 186-187.