Japan comic books fan hatred towards China By Norimitsu Onishi (The New York Times) Updated: 2005-11-21 09:35 Many of the same influences are at work in the other new comic book, "An
Introduction to China," which depicts the Chinese as obsessed with cannibalism
and prostitution, and has sold 180,000 copies.
The book describes China as the "world's prostitution superpower" and says,
without offering evidence, that prostitution accounts for 10 percent of the
country's gross domestic product. It describes China as a source of disease and
depicts Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi saying, "I hear that most of the
epidemics that broke out in Japan on a large scale are from China."
The book waves away Japan's worst wartime atrocities in China. It dismisses
the Rape of Nanjing, in which historians say 100,000 to 300,000 Chinese were
killed by Japanese soldiers in 1937-38, as a fabrication of the Chinese
government devised to spread anti-Japanese sentiment.
The book also says the Japanese Imperial Army's Unit 731 - which researched
biological warfare and conducted vivisections, amputations and other experiments
on thousands of Chinese and other prisoners - was actually formed to defend
Japanese soldiers against the Chinese.
"The only attractive thing that China has to offer is Chinese food," said Ko
Bunyu, a Taiwan-born writer who provided the script for the comic book. Mr. Ko,
66, has written more than 50 books on China, some on cannibalism and others
arguing that Japanese were the real victims of their wartime atrocities in
China. The book's main author and cartoonist, a Japanese named George Akiyama,
declined to be interviewed.
Like some in Taiwan who are virulently anti-mainland, Mr. Ko is fiercely
pro-Japanese and has lived here for four decades. A longtime favorite of the
Japanese right, Mr. Ko said anti-Japan demonstrations in Chinese mainland early this year
had earned him a wider audience. Sales of his books surged this year, to one
million.
"I have to thank the mainland, really," Mr. Ko said. "But I'm disappointed that the
sales of my books could have been more than one or two million if they had
continued the demonstrations."
Courtesy of The New York Times
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