Kim
Pil-ryeon poses in front of a Japanese house owned by a former governor
on Ulleung Island on Oct 24. Kim, a native of the island, has many
memories of Japanese neighbors and songs. / Korea Times photos by Shim Hyun-chul |
ULLEUNGDO ISLAND
Kim Pil-ryeon, 85, a native of this island, has a dying wish
that will most likely be unfulfilled — meeting her Japanese classmates
and neighbors with whom she shared many fond memories in her hometown.
Kim
may not be aware of how the rest of her compatriots feel about Japan
after its provocative claims to the Dokdo islets. But there are some
relics dating from the Japanese colonial rule on the island that will
ensure people never forget the dark chapter of Korea’s history.
Tourists
enjoy the scenic view of Ulleung Island from the Naesujeon Observation
Deck on the east coast of the East Sea island. Dokdo, a sister island of Ulleung, can be seen from there on a fine day. |
Nevertheless,
Ulleung islanders have preserved a few of the Japanese houses to teach
succeeding generations about the country’s colonial occupation by Japan,
instead of razing them to allow the bitter past fade into oblivion. .
Lee
Won-hwi, curator of the Dokdo Museum on Ulleung, says some elderly on
the island feel nostalgia for the co-existence of Korean natives and
Japanese new settlers, who occupied a large part of the island in search
of better lives.
A Japanese house built during Japan’s 1910-1945 colonization of Korea. |
“The Japanese taught Koreans how to catch squid and made their living by logging and renting modern fishing boats,” he said.
“It
is regretful that some former Japanese Ulleung settlers and their
decedents continue to have a misleading belief that their occupation of
the island was justifiable.”
An exterior view of a house built by a Japanese businessman in the 1910s on Ulleung Island. |
Lee
stressed that descendents of Japanese residents in Ulleung sometimes
pay visits to the Dokdo Museum and often find themselves baffled to find
out that Dokdo has long been a part of Ulleung residents’ life and both
Dokdo and Ulleung were strategically used for the colonization of the
Korean Peninsula and Japan’s war against Russia.
Japanese
troops even built watch towers on the hills of the island’s coast in
September 1904 to prepare for a naval battle in the East Sea during the
Russo-Japanese War.
An interior view of the old Japanese house shown in the left picture. |
A year later, Japan annexed Dokdo to construct watch towers and a telegraph station on the easternmost islets.
Historical
records show an Ulleung Governor permitted Japanese fishermen to reside
in the island and do business as migrants since 1897, more than 10
years prior to Japan’s colonization of Korea on the condition that they
pay taxes to the Korean government.
Gina
Anindyajati, an Indonesia medical doctor who toured Ulleung last week,
says she sees layers of hope that Ulleung Island becomes a thriving
international port town with throngs of Japanese tourists.
She,
however, noted that the Japanese government and right-wingers should
make sincere apologies first for the atrocities it committed during the
colonial rule, such as sex slavery of Korean women, and unlawful
annexation of Dokdo.
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