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- Aug 10, 2008
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I was in Tokyo for 3 days last week. I have always wonder what the big deal was about Yasukuni, why a simple visit by Japanese Politician can create such a big stir and what the Japanese believed about WWII. Granted, I knew that post-war Japaneses never had a detailed account of the atrocities that the Imperial Japanese army committed during WWII and I knew that Yasukuni enshrined Class-A war criminals. But I just had to encounter it myself.
And so off I went.
Yasukuni was a serene place, a park in the middle of metropolitan Tokyo City. It is a good place to take a rest, away from the hustle of city life. It was a short walk from the subway and sits right next to the Budokan Stadium. The main shrine looks just like the famous Meji shine. To pray, put your hands together, say your prayers, clap, and then put your hands together again. That's how the Japanese do it. I didn't of course, because I knew well that within the shrine houses the spirits of those who could have murdered my relatives more than 60 years ago.
Next to the shrine was the museum.
And so off I went.
Yasukuni was a serene place, a park in the middle of metropolitan Tokyo City. It is a good place to take a rest, away from the hustle of city life. It was a short walk from the subway and sits right next to the Budokan Stadium. The main shrine looks just like the famous Meji shine. To pray, put your hands together, say your prayers, clap, and then put your hands together again. That's how the Japanese do it. I didn't of course, because I knew well that within the shrine houses the spirits of those who could have murdered my relatives more than 60 years ago.
Next to the shrine was the museum.