Hope for world peace

Queenie 2022-12-22 00:13:40

At the age of 25, I finally watched the movie I wanted to see when I was 16.

I still remember that when the winner was announced that year, the host uttered the five-character tone of Seediq Bale, but because of the subject matter and occasions, I delayed watching this movie that I wanted to see for a long time.

This movie is worth waiting for all these years, because at 16 I probably wouldn't enjoy it as much as I am now.

It's a very worthwhile historical movie. In the early days of the movie, I was looking forward to the uprising of the aborigines, and I was also angry at the behavior of the Japanese, but in the end when the rebellion and the massacre really started, I found that I didn't have any A feeling of pleasure, but a feeling of intolerance and sadness.

In a way, this is a collision of barbarism and civilization. The aborigines can't accept losing their hunting grounds, but maybe the Japanese gave them respect and fairness from the beginning, and it wouldn't have evolved like this? But it's really hard to think about it. Isn't the most common mistake "civilized people" make is to look down on people who are not well-educated?

When the aborigines raised their knives and slashed at women and children, I knew that in their hearts lived an untamed beast. It's kind of sad, but the Japanese used to treat them the same way.

The war will only bring harm. Every living being, the stories behind them, their friends and lovers will not be seen when the knife falls. It seems that there are no "people" on the battlefield. Only "enemy" and "either you die or I die". So sad.

Hope for world peace.

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Extended Reading

Sai de ke · ba lai: Tai yang qi quotes

  • Yahiko Kamada: I wanted to civilize you, but you forced me to be savage.

  • Mona Rudao: Dakis, when you die, are you entering a Japanese shrine, or the heavenly home of our ancestors? Are you Dakis or Hanaoka Ichiro?