To sea if I go, bloated corpse shall I become To mountains if I go, grass-grown corpse I shall become At Emperor's side, in fight to perish shall we And never ever watch back
My late dad was 14 years old during the Japanese occupation of Malaya in 1942. The Japanese would make all students learn this song (among others). Decades later, my dad would occasionally sing this song as he recalled his time as a teenager. It's sad in tone and lyrics indeed. May the souls of the departed rest in peace.
@@SenyorCapitàCollons During WWII, Malaysia has not existed as an independent and sovereign nation yet. Malaya (not Malaysia) was a name used by the British colonial masters to describe peninsular Malaya and the island of Singapore then. If you meant how the Japanese occupiers treated the Malayan natives during WWII, they treated different ethnic races differently. The Chinese got the harshest treatment because some had supported the anti-Japanese war effort on mainland China. The "Sook Ching" operation not only targeted Chinese men living in Singapore, but also those in peninsular Malaya. Only those Indians who supported the pro-Japanese and anti-British fight for independence in India were treated better than those ethnic Indians who resisted the Japanese. In general, the Malays got the best treatment relative to the other two races. Like my dad, all were nevertheless subjected to the same indoctrination of Japanese language and culture during the Japanese occupation.
I have heard about the horrors of war from the media, books, and older people. But I have not experienced it myself. But there is one thing I can say with certainty: I would rather die than have my country, Japan, ruled by foreigners. I say this with certainty, even if I am criticized for being ignorant or militaristic.
Es ist keine Lüge. Das ist Patriotismus und Liebe zum Vaterland. Wir wurden angelogen, mein japanischer Kamerad! Wie ein großer Mann sagte: *Die Gewinner werden nicht gefragt, ob sie richtig oder falsch liegen.* 🇯🇵🤝🇩🇪
To sea if I go, bloated corpse shall I become
To mountains if I go, grass-grown corpse I shall become
At Emperor's side, in fight to perish shall we
And never ever watch back
Very solemn, beautiful
My late dad was 14 years old during the Japanese occupation of Malaya in 1942.
The Japanese would make all students learn this song (among others).
Decades later, my dad would occasionally sing this song
as he recalled his time as a teenager.
It's sad in tone and lyrics indeed.
May the souls of the departed
rest in peace.
How did the Japanese treated Malaysian?
@@SenyorCapitàCollons During WWII, Malaysia has not existed as an independent and sovereign nation yet.
Malaya (not Malaysia) was a name used by the British colonial masters to describe peninsular Malaya and the island of Singapore then.
If you meant how the Japanese occupiers treated the Malayan natives during WWII, they treated different ethnic races differently. The Chinese got the harshest treatment because some had supported the anti-Japanese war effort on mainland China. The "Sook Ching" operation not only targeted Chinese men living in Singapore, but also those in peninsular Malaya. Only those Indians who supported the pro-Japanese and anti-British fight for independence in India were treated better than those ethnic Indians who resisted the Japanese. In general, the Malays got the best treatment relative to the other two races. Like my dad, all were nevertheless subjected to the same indoctrination of Japanese language and culture during the Japanese occupation.
Wonderful song, history and state. Japanese culture is one of the best in the world.
Thank you!
Tenno Heika Banzai
Banzai!
🇯🇵🤝🇹🇭
sheeeeesh
@@bencenagy9256 What...
@CAT CHANNEL thai is very pro and viet nam and combodia and laos is noob fighting
I have heard about the horrors of war from the media, books, and older people. But I have not experienced it myself.
But there is one thing I can say with certainty: I would rather die than have my country, Japan, ruled by foreigners. I say this with certainty, even if I am criticized for being ignorant or militaristic.
That is not militaristic.
thank you. I'm glad you understand.
Es ist keine Lüge. Das ist Patriotismus und Liebe zum Vaterland. Wir wurden angelogen, mein japanischer Kamerad!
Wie ein großer Mann sagte:
*Die Gewinner werden nicht gefragt, ob sie richtig oder falsch liegen.*
🇯🇵🤝🇩🇪
Please make a video on mehter a very melodius turkish war music. I feeled so good when I listened it
🎎🎌
Japan real anthem
Banzai
:)
T partout toi
@@NapoleonAquila oui
@@sauronmordor7494 そうか
@@NapoleonAquila Arigato
@@sauronmordor7494 違い、おいおい君日本語はぜんぜん分かりません。