Seoul wins battle against Japan for US textbooks

Agence France-Presse

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The Virginia House of Delegates approves requiring textbooks to also refer to the Sea of Japan as the East Sea.

NAMING THE WATER. The issue of territories in textbooks is a long-standing issue. In this 2011 photo, South Korea lodged a strong protest with Japan for approving new school textbooks laying claims to a disputed cluster of rocky outcroppings in the Sea of Japan (East Sea), known as Takeshima in Japan and Dokdo in South Korea. Photo by Jung Yeon-Je/AFP

WASHINGTON, DC, USA – Virginia’s state legislature approved Thursday a bill requiring school textbooks to include the Korean name for the sea between Japan and South Korea, in a major win for Seoul.

The two key US allies, battling renewed tensions dating from imperial Japan, fought a proxy battle over the textbook change, with their respective ambassadors visiting the Southern state’s capital Richmond repeatedly.

Korean American activists gained the upper hand in their effort to address historical grievances with Japan – that rouse deep passions in South Korea – at the local level in the United States.

The Virginia House of Delegates voted 81-15 to approve the measure requiring “that all textbooks approved by the Board of Education (after July 1, 2014) when referring to the Sea of Japan, shall note that it is also referred to as the East Sea”.

The bill, which has already cleared the Senate, now awaits the signature of Democratic Governor Terry McAuliffe, who is widely expected to sign it into law.

There was no immediate response from Japan, but the South Korean government, which had enthusiastically supported the bill, welcomed its passage.

“This is the result of efforts by our compatriots in the US to make the name of the East Sea used more widely, and we highly appreciate it,” said foreign ministry spokesman Cho Tai-Young.

Japan, which opposed the textbook change and hired a team of lobbyists to defend its position, had stressed that “Sea of Japan” was the only name for the body of water that was recognized by the United Nations and the International Hydrographic Organization.

“Sea of Japan” was already in common usage in the world in the early 19th century, when the country had an isolationist policy and prior to Japanese colonial rule.

Koreans say the name is a legacy of Japanese colonialism, and prefer to use “East Sea.” 

The Virginia battle was an unenviable choice for the state, where Asian Americans are increasingly seen as a critical voting bloc for President Barack Obama’s Democratic Party but where Japan is by far a larger trading partner, investing nearly $1 billion in the past 5 years – second only to Germany. – Rappler.com

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