710,000 Japanese who were confiscated by the U.S. in 1945 and expelled from Joseon, are they pro-Japanese considering that they were also victims of history

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(1)Taepyeong-ro “I miss my old house in Yongsan when I was young.”
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(4)710,000 Japanese who were confiscated by the U.S. in 1945 and expelled from Joseon, are they pro-Japanese considering that they were also victims of history
(5)I once met a Japanese man named ‘Seoul is the hometown of Furusato’ Born in Yongsan in 1932, he said, “I miss the neighborhood alley where I used to play with my friends.” My eyes are wet with tears “After the end of the war in August 1945, I left my two-story house and furniture that I lived with my parents and moved to Japan,” said A, who met in 2010 during a report, which was the 100th anniversary of the forced annexation of Korea and Japan Mr. A also felt that he was a victim of history, regardless of his will, and is it a pro-Japanese to think that his feelings of longing for where he lived as a child are wrong or that he could not be helped because of the original sin of being born as an invading nation

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(1)In August 1945, the Japanese who lived in colonial Joseon like A’s family were 71
(2)The U.S. military government made it its most urgent task to seize the property of Japanese living on the Korean Peninsula and withdraw them to their home countries. A study found that Japanese left $5.246 billion after liberation, 80 to 85 of Korea’s total assets It must have been a bloody pain for a Japanese individual who had to leave behind all his assets in his hometown where he had been trying to live his whole life Is it the attitude of anti-humanism to think that it is a pleasant thing because it is a karma that has taken away other people’s country? Is it a pro-Japanese group if you think about it like this

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As to how they got the land

Don’t you think

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