Surivors of the Australian campain
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Surivors of the Australian campain
Henry Ito
The Japanese invasion of Australia was one of the biggest military disasters in Japanese military history. Out of a force of 100,000 men only 2 survived. Prince Yasukiko Asaka and Jiro Watanabe, a prince of the nation and a conscript peasant. One of them was born into extreme wealth and privilege, the other was born into abject poverty.
The prince managed to escape the final battle by swimming to a Japanese cruiser sent to rescue the prince from certain death while others fought to the death to give him a chance to survive. Jiro Watanabe survived by being too sick and infirm to fight. The prince would escape and live out the rest of the war in japan, Jiro would spend the rest of the war in a prisoner of war camp after being nursed back to health by the Australian army.
While the prince lived in relative luxury while his people suffered, Jiro would spend his time as a prisoner of war in a POW camp outside of Sydney Australia. He would be the only prisoner in the camp for the duration of the war. Jiro decided to spend his time in the POW camp studying art, painting, drawing and getting an education.
When the war ended the two men's fates were switched. The prince was put on trial for war crimes, in exchange for testifying against him Jiro was given immunity to prosecution. Jiro would leave the trial a free man, the prince would spend the rest of his life in prison before he was hanged for his crimes against humanity. With the prince's death Jiro was the last and only survivor of the Australian invasion.
Jiro had been saved by the Australian people to tell the tale of what happened and with his new hard won art skills he became a mangaka. Jiro would work as an artist for many other artists before creating his most famous independent work "the black prince".
Jiro Watanabe, even years after the war was over, still felt a deep sense of anger, rage and betrayal over the late prince's decision to leave his men to die while he escaped to safety, an anger that he kept for his entire life. The Black Prince series was the result of this anger. While the series had excellent writing and art, the true reason for its success was that it came at the right time in the Japanese Zeigest.
Japan was still a badly damaged country when the black prince series was created. It's international reputation was tarnished and destroyed and, with the cold war, it was forced to ally and depend on the very countries it had commited atrocities against. The republic of china, Korea, the philipines, hongkong, Singapore, Australia, Indonesia, America. Japan had commited war crimes against all of them and now had to rely on their charity to survive because their defeat was total and complete.
Jiro's Black Prince series gave the Japanese something important, it gave them some one to blame. It was quite simply impossible to deny that atrocities had been commited by Japanese troops during the war, there was simply too much evidence to deny it. But the Japanese could rebuild their pride by blaming everything on the Black Prince and they did.
The series created the myth of the honorable Japanese serviceman and the evil and despicable officer class led by the depraved Black Prince. As the cold war went on, those who had worked for the previous regime were let out of prison and gained places in the Japanese government. They bought into the myth and used it as a way to explain away any past ethical crimes as something the black prince forced them to do against their will.
Japanese nationalists, even during the war, hated what they considered the Prince's cowardly escape while his men died and decided to buy into the national myth. In death the black prince became a cowardly evil figure that was featured in Japanese TV and movies about world war two, more akin to a demon or monster than a man. In Japanese textbooks more and more of the atrocities commited by the Japanese would be attributed to him until he became the chesssmaster behind the war.
Jiro, by contrast, would go on to create other mangas and eventually help found one of the largest magna companies, weekly shohen Jump. Jiro would die from advanced lung cancer in 1984, surrounded by his friends and family, one of the wealthiest men in japan and a respected father of Japanese Manga. The Black prince he destested so much in life died alone, stripped of all of his assests.
The contrasting fates of the two survivors of the Australian campaign helped shape modern day japan and make it the country it is today, for better or worse.
Henry Ito
The Japanese invasion of Australia was one of the biggest military disasters in Japanese military history. Out of a force of 100,000 men only 2 survived. Prince Yasukiko Asaka and Jiro Watanabe, a prince of the nation and a conscript peasant. One of them was born into extreme wealth and privilege, the other was born into abject poverty.
The prince managed to escape the final battle by swimming to a Japanese cruiser sent to rescue the prince from certain death while others fought to the death to give him a chance to survive. Jiro Watanabe survived by being too sick and infirm to fight. The prince would escape and live out the rest of the war in japan, Jiro would spend the rest of the war in a prisoner of war camp after being nursed back to health by the Australian army.
While the prince lived in relative luxury while his people suffered, Jiro would spend his time as a prisoner of war in a POW camp outside of Sydney Australia. He would be the only prisoner in the camp for the duration of the war. Jiro decided to spend his time in the POW camp studying art, painting, drawing and getting an education.
When the war ended the two men's fates were switched. The prince was put on trial for war crimes, in exchange for testifying against him Jiro was given immunity to prosecution. Jiro would leave the trial a free man, the prince would spend the rest of his life in prison before he was hanged for his crimes against humanity. With the prince's death Jiro was the last and only survivor of the Australian invasion.
Jiro had been saved by the Australian people to tell the tale of what happened and with his new hard won art skills he became a mangaka. Jiro would work as an artist for many other artists before creating his most famous independent work "the black prince".
Jiro Watanabe, even years after the war was over, still felt a deep sense of anger, rage and betrayal over the late prince's decision to leave his men to die while he escaped to safety, an anger that he kept for his entire life. The Black Prince series was the result of this anger. While the series had excellent writing and art, the true reason for its success was that it came at the right time in the Japanese Zeigest.
Japan was still a badly damaged country when the black prince series was created. It's international reputation was tarnished and destroyed and, with the cold war, it was forced to ally and depend on the very countries it had commited atrocities against. The republic of china, Korea, the philipines, hongkong, Singapore, Australia, Indonesia, America. Japan had commited war crimes against all of them and now had to rely on their charity to survive because their defeat was total and complete.
Jiro's Black Prince series gave the Japanese something important, it gave them some one to blame. It was quite simply impossible to deny that atrocities had been commited by Japanese troops during the war, there was simply too much evidence to deny it. But the Japanese could rebuild their pride by blaming everything on the Black Prince and they did.
The series created the myth of the honorable Japanese serviceman and the evil and despicable officer class led by the depraved Black Prince. As the cold war went on, those who had worked for the previous regime were let out of prison and gained places in the Japanese government. They bought into the myth and used it as a way to explain away any past ethical crimes as something the black prince forced them to do against their will.
Japanese nationalists, even during the war, hated what they considered the Prince's cowardly escape while his men died and decided to buy into the national myth. In death the black prince became a cowardly evil figure that was featured in Japanese TV and movies about world war two, more akin to a demon or monster than a man. In Japanese textbooks more and more of the atrocities commited by the Japanese would be attributed to him until he became the chesssmaster behind the war.
Jiro, by contrast, would go on to create other mangas and eventually help found one of the largest magna companies, weekly shohen Jump. Jiro would die from advanced lung cancer in 1984, surrounded by his friends and family, one of the wealthiest men in japan and a respected father of Japanese Manga. The Black prince he destested so much in life died alone, stripped of all of his assests.
The contrasting fates of the two survivors of the Australian campaign helped shape modern day japan and make it the country it is today, for better or worse.