During Japan's colonial rule of Korea (1910-1945), the Rice Production Increase Plan was implemented as a systematic scheme to exploit Korean agricultural resources, forcing farmers to increase yields for Japan's benefit while imposing strict quotas, heavy taxes, and land seizures that left Koreans with minimal rations and caused widespread famine, with over 70% of Korea's rice production shipped to Japan during the 1930s-1940s, forcing desperate survival measures like eating tree bark and grass roots.
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The Dark Truth Behind Japan's Rice Production Increase Plan in Colonial KoreaAdded:
In the 1920s, Japan introduced the rice production increase plan in Korea, claiming it would modernize agriculture.
However, this was a systematic scheme to exploit Korea's resources.
Under colonial rule, Japanese authorities forced Korean farmers to increase yields, not for local benefit, [music] but to supply Japan's growing population.
The plan disguised economic plunder as development, setting the stage for widespread [music] famine.
Japanese authorities forcibly consolidated farmland, displacing [music] Korean farmers and turning them into tenant laborers. Strict quotas were imposed, and failure to meet them resulted in brutal punishments. Many families lost their ancestral lands, becoming destitute overnight. [music] The colonial government prioritized rice shipments to Japan, leaving Koreans with meager rations.
This systematic dispossession created a cycle of poverty and [music] hunger.
Over 70% of Korea's rice production was shipped to Japan during the 1930s and 1940s. [music] Ports were filled with sacks labeled for Imperial Japan, while Korean markets stood [music] empty.
The colonial government imposed heavy taxes, forcing farmers [music] to sell their harvests at exploitative prices.
Meanwhile, Koreans faced severe shortages, with many unable to afford even a single bowl of rice per [music] day.
With rice reserves depleted, Koreans turned to desperate measures. Families boiled tree bark, grass roots, and even sawdust to stave off starvation.
Malnutrition led to widespread disease, with many dying from sheer exhaustion.
[music] Elderly and children were the most vulnerable, their bodies swollen from hunger.
Survivors later recalled this period as the time when even the earth tasted [music] like food.
Despite brutal suppression, Koreans resisted. Farmers staged protests, [music] and underground networks smuggled food to starving communities.
After liberation, survivors demanded justice, but Japan's wartime records were deliberately destroyed.
Today, this history remains contentious with many Japanese textbooks downplaying the famine. Yet, the scars persist.
Testimonies from survivors stand as undeniable proof of this calculated food massacre.
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