ADBC Memorial Society
February 15, 2013
VIA FAX and U.S.
MAIL
The Honorable Joseph Y. Yun
Acting Assistant Secretary of State
Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs,
U.S. Department of State
2201 C Street, NW
Washington, DC 20520
Dear Mr. Yun:
As representative of the surviving POWs of Japan, their
families, and descendants, the ADBC Memorial Society asks you to encourage
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe during his visit next week to continue and
expand his government’s visitation program to Japan for American former POWs.
The POW/Japan Friendship Program only initiated in 2010 has
brought immeasurable benefit to the former POWs, their families, and to the
U.S.-Japan relationship. As you can see from this representative note to our
newsgroup, it has brought closure and peace of mind to its participants:
This
program has really helped my Dad. For
years, Dad would have nightmares after any talk, show, or sometimes just
because of his years as a POW. Since our
visit his nightmares have gone. I cannot
really put in words what that day at the Japanese Factory in Takaoka, Toyama,
Japan did. He has not forgotten or
totally forgiven but there is now a peace to his remembrance. If you are able
please consider participating in this program.
My Dad's memory is failing on his daily activities but he continues to
recall his trip to Japan. Now when he
talks about his POW experience he can now add closure. The audience is amazed at his story. I was honored to go with Dad to Japan. If you are a descendant please talk with your
parent about the program. It truly is a
life changer.
Debra
Bergbower-Grunwald
Daughter
of Harold Bergbower, Past National
Commander, ADBC
Impressions of former POWs who have participated in the
POW/Japan Friendship Program are on the Outreach section of our website at www.dg-adbc.org. The program is a solid example of a
successful acknowledgement by Japan of Imperial Japan’s injustices. The
Japanese government offered an official apology and followed it up with a
program that confronts the past while preserving the dignities of both
Americans and Japanese.
It concerns us that the Abe Administration wants to limit
the program to former POWs and possibly end the program this year. Widows, children, and other descendants have
also been affected by the former POW experience of their relative in Japan and
they should be included in future programs. We are concerned about how little the Japan’s
Ministry of Foreign Affairs publicizes the program’s accomplishments. Most important, we are troubled by the Japanese
companies that have refused to allow our nonagenarian POWs to visit the sites
of their imprisonment and slave labor.
The success of this visitation program should encourage
Japan to do more. Still we wait for
Japan’s great multi-national corporations to acknowledge their use of POW
labor. Still we wait for Japan to create
national memorials to the POWs who slaved and died on Japanese soil. And still we wait for Japan to establish a
fund to continue this visitation program and expand it, as it did for other
Allied POWs in 1995, to include research, documentation, and people-to-people
exchanges.
We are grateful for the State Department’s past efforts to encourage
the Japanese government to do the right thing by initiating a process of
reconciliation. This issue is even more
poignant today as two Abe Cabinet members have family ties to companies that
used POW slave labor during the war.
We ask that the Obama Administration insist that Japan
preserve its visitation program for former POWs and expand this remarkable
program to include family members and to initiate a plan to preserve their
history.
Sincerely,
Joseph A. Vater, Jr.
President
cc: Daniel
Russel, National Security Council
Steve Pomper, National Security
Council
Darianne Page, The White House
Marc Knapper, Japan Desk,
Department of State
Anne Debovoise, Japan Desk,
Department of State
The Honorable Robert Menendez
The Honorable Bob Corker
The Honorable Ben Cardin
The Honorable Marco Rubio
The Honorable Bernie Sanders
The Honorable Richard Burr
The Honorable Edward Royce
The Honorable Eliot Engel
The Honorable Steve Chabot
The Honorable Eni F.H.
Faleomavaega
The Honorable Jeff Miller
The Honorable Michael H. Michaud
The Honorable Mike Honda
Mr. Barry Jersinoski, Disabled
Veterans of America
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