Okinawan State of Mind
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/eo20070924kh.html
GJ... Nevertheless, education ministry censors of high school history textbooks scheduled for use beginning next year ordered revisions in all passages stating that mass suicides of Okinawan local residents during the Battle of Okinawa were ordered by the Japanese military. The revisions, the first of their kind ever ordered by the ministry, made many Okinawans very angry.
To obtain ministry approval, textbook publishers changed the passages, with the revised versions saying ambiguously that some residents were "forced" to commit mass suicides.
In the mass suicides, relatives killed one another or parents killed their children before killing themselves as they were cornered by the horrors of war. The mass suicides are the worst tragedy of the Battle of Okinawa, and Okinawans have tended to treat the topic as taboo. All Okinawans agree that people would have never killed their loved ones if it had not been for the Japanese military's involvement (orders, pressure, inducement, indoctrination, etc.)
Since March, when the results of the textbook screenings were known, there have been growing demands in the prefecture to have the screening results rescinded. The prefectural assembly twice adopted a written opinion demanding the withdrawal of the screening results. All municipalities in Okinawa Prefecture have taken similar action.
On Sept. 29, some 50,000 Okinawans are expected to hold a rally to demand the nullification of the screening results. Gov. Hirokazu Nakaima, who was reportedly reluctant to attend the gathering, changed his mind and decided to take part. Most of the mayors of the 41 municipalities in Okinawa Prefecture decided to attend the rally. Their attendance will turn it into a prefecture-wide protest against the education ministry....