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「教訓1」を三線でカバーしてみました。 工工四がなかったのでコードは原曲を耳コピ、アレンジを加えています。 無惨な歴史を繰り返さないために、 過去から学び、今を、未来を生きましょう。 ========================= Title of the song: "Lesson Number One" Composed by Ryo Kagawa (1971) Instrument: Sanshin This year marks the 75th anniversary of the end of WWⅡ. The song "Lesson Number One", originally in Japanese: Kyokun 1 (教訓1), was composed by a Japanese folk singer Ryo Kagawa in 1971. It was inspired by the tragic history of WWⅡ, in which Japanese citizens had sacrificed themselves as well as the Japanese soldiers had killed numerous in foreign countries, believing that they did so for a noble goal of the Japanese nation. In this cover, I play Sanshin, a traditional instrument of Okinawa, the southernmost islands of Japan, which was originally an independent kingdom with a 400 year-long history until Japan occupied it in 1879. Okinawa became the main battlefield at the end of WWⅡ. Within 3 months of the battle, one in four citizens (about 100,000) was killed in Okinawa. With the hope that we - all citizens - will never be ignorant enough to repeat the mistakes of the past, I covered the song with Sanshin. Okinawa Today: Since the end of WWⅡ, Okinawa has been still occupied and used as a military fort by both governments of the U.S. and Japan for the sake of "national security", under the Japan-U.S. military alliance system. Okinawa is home to about half the 54,000 U.S. troops stationed in Japan and houses the largest U.S. airbase in the Asia-Pacific region. There are 33 U.S. military facilities in Okinawa, which occupy 18.2% of the total landmass of the main Okinawa island. (Okinawa Times Reported, 2019) Also, the governments of Japan and the U.S. have been constructing a new U.S. military base in Henoko, in the north of the island. People in Okinawa have been claiming to reduce the burden of the U.S. military bases. A result of the 2019's non-binding referendum in Okinawa showed that 72.2 percent of voters rejected the construction of the U.S. base at Henoko. However, the central government of Japan made clear that it saw no alternative to its plan to build at Henoko. Moreover, the central government has deployed the Self-Defense Forces of Japan (SDF) in the surrounding islands of Okinawa: New missile bases are under construction on Ishigaki, Miyako, and Amami. Communication forces were deployed in 2017 on Yonaguni, the westernmost island of Okinawa, at the border of China and Taiwan.