The years after World War Two |
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Demonstrations in front of the Japanese embassyWe spent two most wonderful days in Bangkok, the Thais are really very nice people and I am most certainly happy that I have seen this town. Back in the Netherlands, I joined the demonstrators together with my friend Hanneke, in front of the Japanese embassy. The group was organized by the “Foundation of Japanese Honorary Debts” in 1995. This foundation has around 95 000 members but only about 20 000 are contributors. At the end of the war the Japanese Kempeitai destroyed all the papers that could have witnessed their crimes in this part of Asia. The British troops, our so called liberators arrived around half September 1945, almost one month after the end of WWII. Around sixty to seventy of us stand in front of the Japanese embassy every second Tuesday of the month. In the beginning we were with many more people. But some of us died and others are now too old to stand there for more than an hour in good or bad weather. Several of us are well over eighty years old. Our chairman, and one of the other board members from the Foundation of Honorary Debts visit the Japanese ambassador each month for a discussion about World War Two in the former Dutch East Indies. Those discussions are not easy at all. Afterwards we all walk from the Japanese embassy towards the hotel Bel Air, where we are having a lunch together. After so many years standing there together in all sorts of weather, we have become one big family. In May 2000 I came on the list for a 14 days visit to Japan in October that same year. I planned to go to Japan with an open mind towards everything I was going to see, to experience, to feel and to … eat. |
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