The Icelandic Canadian - 01.10.1942, Qupperneq 11

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.10.1942, Qupperneq 11
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 7 later awaken all nations to ithe cosmic truth that their respective national lives issued forth from the one absolute life- centre embodied by the emporor.” The Japanese keep apace with their brother-tyrants in their treatment of conquered peoples. The Japanese, in fact, have an advantage — they have been in the game longer. Korea was captured by Japan in 1910. What are the results after thirty years of Jap- anese domination? Conditions in Korea disclose the thoroughness of the Jap- anese enslavement of this once proud people. The story can best be told in the words of an international writer, George Kent, in an article published in the April, 1942, issue of Asia, a leading periodical on the Orient. “The wealth of the country has been pumped across the sea to Nippon (Japan), with an icy disregard'for the welfare of the people. If you walk along the streets of Seoul, the Korean capital, you will see only Japanese shops filled with Japanese goods. The store clerks are Japanese and so are the well- dressed individuals on the sidewalks. The Koreans are hawking vegetables, pulling rickshaws, carrying heavy loads. “To the farmers, who comprise eighty- five per cent of the population, the con- quest has meant a systematic house-to- house looting. . . . Today close to 18,000,000 men, women and children— out of a total population of 23,000,000—- have become tenants and squatters. . . . “Their state of mind, as described by a Japanese economist, has become one of ‘utter desperation and barren stolid- ity’. A home-loving people, they are obliged to shift their quarters each year because the Japanese owners will not make arrangements with the Korean tenants for more than a twelve-month period. A tenant’s share of the crop, when all deductions are made, comes to about seventeen per cent, or enough to give him an annual income of about ten dollars. . . . “Each spring, millions of farmers and their families are obliged to roam the barren hillsides, scratching up roots and bark and weeds in order to keep from dying of hunger. ‘It is the land of the spring starvation,’ the Governor--Gen- eral (Japanese) writes in his annual report.” How would the Western Canadian farmer like it if, after he had put in his crop, he were compelled to roam the hill- sides of the Riding Mountains in Manitoba or the slopes of the Rockies for sustenance during the summer and then return to harvest the crop for the Hun and Japanese masters? We have the blueprint before us. The story of conquered Korea reveals the fate that awaits us if the tyrant nations win. We Want to be in It The Icelandic Canadians want to be in this war. We are determined to do our share, no matter how small it may relatively be, in helping the United Nations to crush the enemies of free man. We recall with pride how many of our group volunteered in the World War—the first act of one global drama. Those of our people who are at the post of duty in Canada or who by reason of age or infirmity must content them- selves with the more humble service at home, watch with even greater pride the enlistments of our sons and daugh- ters, and the excellent account they give of themselves wherever duty calls them. Some have been wounded; others have given their all. We, no less than other Canadians, know that many more will go—many other casualty lists wii1 be published. We try to enter into the heroic spirit of Madame Chiang Kai- shek, who reached the very soul of re-born China with these inspiring words: “When our men go to the battlefield they are prepared to die. They feel that they have a sacred mission entrusted to them and they are determined to fulfill

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The Icelandic Canadian

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