欢迎来到VOA在线收网 www.voa365.com
当前位置:VOA NEWS > VOA慢速英语 > AS IT IS >

AS IT IS 2014-04-30 American Textbooks Are Caught in Diplomatic Fight

2014-04-30 22:21来源:未知

音频下载

Democratic Governor Terry McAuliffe of Virginia

Democratic Governor Terry McAuliffe of Virginia

Hello, and welcome to As It Is from VOA Learning English!
 
I’m Christopher Cruise in Washington.
 
Today on the program, we report on an international dispute that has reached the American state of Virginia.
 
“From an American perspective, it’s a little bit frustrating that, you know, our democracy becomes the venue for this battle, and it’s probably not the best way to create your social studies textbooks.”
 
The dispute involves Japan and South Korea. The two countries have long argued about what to call a waterway that separates them. Recently, a group of Korean-Americans asked lawmakers in Virginia to consider the issue. What the state lawmakers decided to do is the subject of our program today on As It Is.
 
American Schoolbooks Involved in Diplomatic Dispute

Japan and South Korea have been arguing over the name of a sea in Asia that lies between the two countries. That disagreement has reached the legislature in the American state of Virginia. The dispute went all the way to Virginia’s governor
 
What Japan calls “The Sea of Japan,” South Korea calls “The East Sea.” A group of Korean-Americans wants schoolbooks in Virginia to show both names. That has caused a diplomatic battle between the two countries.
 
It all started when a man named Peter Kim asked his son -- who was in 5th grade -- a question. The answer surprised him.
 
“I asked himKris, do you know the name, do you know the sea between South Korea and Japan?’ He said ‘Yes, daddy.’ ‘What’s the name of it?’ He says ‘The Sea of Japan.’ And I got really upset. And, and I checked the textbook and there it was: the Sea of Japan only.”
 
Mr. Kim was born in South Korea. He says everyone there calls it the East Sea.
 
Some Korean-American activists say the nameSea of Japandates back to a time when Japan ruled Korea. They say the sea should not have the name given to it during a time when the Japanese military illegally occupied and colonized Korea. Japanese forces took control of Korea in 1910 and ruled the peninsula until the end of World War II in 1945.    
 
Peter Kim appealed to the administration of President Barack Obama for help. He sent the Obama administration a document asking that both names be used. The document contained the signatures of more than 100,000 people
                                                                   
But administration officials said the United States only recognizes the nameSea of Japan.” Yet the State Department has noted that South Korea wants to use the name East Sea.  
 
Soon, Mr. Kim learned that he should deal with the issue on a state, not a federal, level. So he formed a group called “The Voice of Korean Americans” and began talking to state lawmakers in Virginia. In February, the Virginia legislature approved a bill requiring future school textbooks to use both names.
 
State lawmaker Timothy Hugo wrote the bill. VOA spoke with him on the day when Virginia’s House of Delegates approved the measure
 
“It was a lot of work. I am glad we got it passed today with over 80 votes in the House of Delegates.”
 
Large majorities in the House of Delegates and Senate voted to approve the bill.
 
Governor Signs Bill Requiring Textbooks Use "East Sea"

Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe quietly signed the bill into law at the end of March. So, beginning in July, Virginia will be the first state to require that new textbooks include the nameEast Sea” in addition to “Sea of Japan.”

 

It was not a surprise that the governor approved the measure. Last year he wrote a letter in support of the effort by The Voice of Korean-Americans. The Reuters news agency reports there are 82,000 Korean-Americans in Virginia, but just 19,000 ethnic Japanese
 
But the Washington Post reported that the governor and his aides attempted to quietly cancel the bill before Virginia legislators voted on it. They felt approval might affect relations and the state’s strong economic ties with Japan. The newspaper reported that soon after Mr. McAuliffe was elected governor last year, he received a letter from the Japanese embassy in Washington, DC. It said a change of the name of the sea in Virginia textbooks could hurt trade between Japan and the state.
 
The Associated Press reported that Japan’s ambassador to the United States was personally involved in efforts to try to keep the bill from becoming law. Kenichiro Sasae reportedly met with Governor McAuliffe in January to ask him not to sign the measure. The ambassador noted that Japan is the second-largest foreign investor in Virginia. Japanese-owned companies employ 13,000 workers statewide. But Mr. McAuliffe had promised during his election campaign that he would sign a bill and he kept his promise.
 
The History of the Dispute


James Schoff works at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He explains how the dispute over the name of the waterway first began.
 
“In 1929 I think it was, the International Hydrographic Organization went around and said ‘We need to, to officially name all the international bodies of, of water,’ and they chose ‘The Sea of Japan.’ This was at a time that Japan was occupying -- colonizing -- Korea, and so Korea felt that they had no voice.”
 

Sea of Japan or East Sea?Sea of Japan or East Sea?

Last year, the IHO rejected a demand by South Korea to change the name. The IHO will not meet again until 2017.
 
James Schoff says the Virginia state legislature is not the right place to settle this kind of dispute.
 
“From an American perspective, it’s a little bit frustrating that, you know, our democracy becomes the venue for this battle and it’s probably not the best way to create your social studies textbooks.”
 
Mark Keam is a member of the Virginia House of Delegates. He was a supporter of the bill. He came to the United States from Korea when he was 14 years old
 
What they’re saying is Korean history has been somewhat misplaced or misrepresented in the past; let’s make sure that Virginia corrects that.”
 
There are also efforts in the American states of Georgia, New York and New Jersey to require textbooks to use the name East Sea. Many Korean-Americans live in those areas
 
And that’s our program for today. It was based on a report from VOA’s Mariama Diallo and from stories by the Kyodo News Service, Reuters, The Washington Post and the Associated Press.  
 
You can listen to and read the report anytime at our website: learningenglish.voanews.com.
 
We really do want to hear what you would like to hear about on a future program. Write to us at:
 
VOA Learning English                                                   
Washington, DC  20237
USA

(责任编辑:v365)
最新新闻
  1. 当前关注:拼多多“出海”:对标
  2. 微动态丨iPhone 14全线破发 苹果将
  3. 资讯:“二舅”UP主回应质疑:目前
  4. 特斯拉上海超级工厂一期第二阶段
  5. 苹果高管Huang回应iOS 16复制粘贴许
  6. 特斯拉8月份在北京上海等城市新
  7. 苹果宣布10月欧洲 App Store 应用和
  8. Lilium携手软件巨头Palantir展开合作
  9. 暴雪《暗黑破坏神 4》即将封测
  10. 因丰巢快递柜侵犯肖像权等,龚俊
  11. 美富豪亿万艾萨克曼与SpaceX合作
  12. 今日聚焦!碾压iPhone 14系列!曝华
  13. 当前头条:华为Mate50首发5G套装 明
  14. 即时看!iPhone 15明年或将搭载Type
  15. 全球即时:售价799元!华为Mate 50系
  16. 资讯:针对iPhone机型《王者荣耀》
  17. 每日看点!1.5K直屏+骁龙8+旗舰芯!
  18. 【独家】iPhone 14顶配速度拉胯了!
  19. 世界热点评!仅限30条!Mate50卫星通
  20. 天天微资讯!华为Mate 50系列通信壳
  21. 环球速讯:土豪金被冷落!iPhone1
  22. 世界看点:经济学家任泽平:iPho
  23. 每日速讯:工信部:鸿蒙操作系统
  24. 天天信息:鹿晗为关晓彤庆生 鹿
  25. 当前短讯!啃完华为又嚼苹果,手
  26. 天天时讯:赌王三房千金何超云获
  27. 世界看点:成立12年,中国首家上市
  28. 环球今亮点:井柏然晒秋日身穿毛
  29. 天天观热点:《奇怪的律师禹英雨
  30. 天天亮点:汪小菲张颖颖外出聚餐
  31. 世界微动态丨李政宰确诊新冠中断
  32. 世界快看点:林允儿回应《黑话律
  33. 天天视点:魔力红Maroon 5主唱被曝
  34. 全球热点评!9月20日酒泉疫情最新
  35. 环球观速讯:9月20日张掖甘州区疫
  36. 天天视点:9月20日甘肃疫情最新消
  37. 今日精选:9月20日岳阳疫情最新消
  38. 快资讯:9月20日湘潭疫情最新消息
  39. 每日资讯:2022-09-20 14:17哈尔滨疫
  40. 世界热资讯:青海昨日新增本土无
  41. 【环球时快讯】92号、95号汽油价
  42. 世界快播:9月20日杭州疫情最新消
  43. 世界视讯!官宣,iPhone即将支持《
  44. 当前关注:华为Mate 50系列5G通信壳
  45. 环球热门:比iPhone 14PM还贵!华为
  46. 当前视讯!大部分供应商将收到加
  47. 天天百事通!卢伟冰深夜疑惑:年
  48. 环球观焦点:华为Mate 50系列5G通信
  49. 环球焦点:青蛙会被水淹死吗
  50. 当前看点!OPPO K10系列荒野乱斗联名