Japan

“Pearl Harbor is something very painful. Why did the government even start – I know there’s a reason, all those trading things but still, the whole entire thing is nothing positive to Japanese citizens,” said Amador Valley Japanese teacher Reiko Murphy. 

Why it happened

“At that time, it was at the end of the European history [of colonization] that they stopped invading other countries. They did all those things in the past years but they kind of stopped doing it. And then Japan wanted to join and have — not citizens, just military because citizens are never interested in the war — they went into the war because they didn’t have any resources. Japan doesn’t have any resources, but still it’s not right,” said Murphy. 

Around 2.1 million Japanese soldiers died in World War II.

“Overall it’s my opinion and also the majority of Japanese people’s opinions they’re really against the war, period,” said Murphy. “And then what happened in World War II, the citizens usually don’t have a choice, the war starts or just like here too we don’t really have a choice to attack if we choose to. They suffer so much, citizens, little sons and fathers.”

Japanese Citizens

To end World War II in 1945, the United dropped two nuclear bombs over Hiroshima and Nagasaki, killing around 160,000-240,000 civilians. 

“I’m from Hiroshima so I’ve seen, we went to museums, even though it happened in 1945, but still, for my city about 100,000 people were killed by the atomic bomb, and the entire war too including Pearl Harbor is just very painful to Japanese people, so they don’t even speak about it. It may be good and bad but sometimes that if we don’t talk about it then government does whatever they do, all I think is really the Japanese all think the whole war was just awful,” said Murphy.

Destruction to Japan was widespread, including bombing raids on Tokyo considered the deadliest raid in the war.

“The truth was [the] entire Tokyo was bombed – because a lot of people don’t know but – entire of Tokyo bombed and a lot of citizens all completely bombed. So the entire war was just terrible and nothing that Japanese citizens earned,” said Murphy.

Conclusion

“We built unnecessary animosity between the countries,” said Murphy. “The Japanese side is just we feel pearl harbor is against [beliefs,] but comparing to the entire country being completely bombed as a punishment, that is really scary as a citizen because they’re not the military, they’re like children, but I dont know…It’s just a gruesome war. It’s not the American citizens’ choice either.”