Content area
Full Text
IN MASUJI IBUSE's DOCUMENTARY NOVEL, Black Rain (Kumi Ame), a conversation among factory workers in the atomic ruins of Hiroshima just prior to the Imperial broadcast and surrender raises questions about the bomb. The questions-and conjectures that follow-are interesting for what they reveal and what they conceal:
Wouldn't it have been possible to surrender before the bomb had been dropped? No-it was because the bomb was dropped that Japan was surrendering. Even so, the enemy must have known that Japan was beaten already; it was hardly necessary to drop the bomb. Either way, those responsible for setting up the organization that started this war. . . .
At this point, the conversation threatened to stray into forbidden territory, and conjecture went no farther.1
In the novel, the workers' struggle to size up the situation and assess responsibility for nuclear devastation demonstrates a measure of balance before being cut short. Self-censorship simply goes with the forbidden territory. Don't go there. But what if the factory hands freely extended the conjectural sequence to the end of the line? Where would it have taken them? Most likely, "those responsible" for the end game would have been named as the Japanese emperor, die-hard militarists, and co-opted civilian government officials, and the "organization" would have been in place at least since 1931 and the Manchurian Incident.
If the conjectures freely encompassed the catastrophic situation of World War II, including the more immediate Pacific / Great East Asia / Fifteen-Year War, the workers would have mentioned the indiscriminate practice of total war, that is, blurring the distinction between combatants and noncombatants-beginning with Germany's bombing of Guernica in the Spanish Civil War and ending with the fire bombing of Tokyo and the dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki by the United States. In between, such cities as Chungking, Shanghai, Warsaw, Rotterdam, London, Coventry, Hamburg, Dresden, and Leipzig were subject to strategic bombing campaigns by both Axis and Allied Powers, in which the massive killing of civilians became standard operating procedure.
Finally, such conjectures would need to consider the nature of both western and Japanese imperialism, Japanese aggression and crimes committed against other Asian peoples, the escalation of atrocities on both sides (Japan/U.S.), the savage fighting and ever increasing death...