Current location - Quotes Website - Famous sayings - Have you ever seen the eulogy of the Japanese emperor who invaded China? I really can't read it. Far less "insightful" than his famous saying
Have you ever seen the eulogy of the Japanese emperor who invaded China? I really can't read it. Far less "insightful" than his famous saying

On September 18, 1987, the 86-year-old Japanese Emperor Hirohito contracted intestinal disease and was sent to the hospital for surgery. This is the first emperor among the 124 generations of emperors to undergo medical surgery.

The next year, his condition worsened, and his son Akihito learned that his father had cancer, duodenal cancer. But this matter is only known to the closest ministers and family members of the royal family. The outside world has been kept hidden.

For more than a year after that, the Japanese people were always paying attention to the dying old emperor. Although he led Japan to the path of fascism and almost lost the country, even though he never confessed to the war until he was old, I don’t take responsibility, but for an emperor who represents the country, and for an old man who is dying of life, most people in Japan still prayed in good faith.

Later, after the government announced the emperor's condition, they lined up to sign the banners and names provided by the government praying for "recovery."

In December 1988, Hirohito was still going strong. He was able to live for more than a year after getting cancer, and the doctors were amazed and called him a miracle. They believe this is related to the regular schedule and simple eating habits that Hirohito developed when he was young. Some imperial doctors also said that his spiritual persistence played a role in his faith. This stubborn old man has been good at resisting and not surrendering throughout his life.

But people will eventually surrender in the face of cancer. At 6:33 in the morning on January 7, 1989, with members of the Japanese royal family waiting, Hirohito's god of death came down and took him away.

The 88-year-old Japanese emperor has reigned for 62 years, not counting the five years he served as regent for his father, making him the longest-reigning Japanese emperor. Although Japanese society repeatedly called on him to abdicate early and give way to the crown prince after the war, he tabooed this and insisted on not abdicating or giving up the throne until his death.

Above: Hirohito as a child, below: Hirohito in his later years

After Hirohito’s death, Japanese Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita issued an official eulogy, saying, “He was a pacifist and constitutionalist. Monarch. During the 62 years of turmoil, he prayed for world peace and the happiness of the people, and practiced it every day... During the war that broke out against his will, he couldn't bear to see the people suffering from the war, so he made up his mind and worked hard regardless of his own life. We must make a wise decision to end the war.”

These extremely disgusting, hypocritical and confusing eulogies should never be applied to the devil who launched the war of aggression against China. He is probably the only one who likes to hear this, so Prime Minister Quan should give him a ride.

Too lazy to spray him.

Hirohito's funeral

Compared with the despised eulogy, one of his "famous quotes" is more suitable as his epitaph. This sentence expresses perfectly, profoundly and implicitly This "famous quote" circulating on the Internet is:

"The problem is not what we did, but the sinister, melancholy, and contradictory mentality when doing these disasters." It’s about how the world reacts to what we do.”