00:03~00:08 If you do something behind our back, people will say bad things about you.
00:08~00:11 Please grant our wishes.
00:11~00:12 Are you sure about what you are saying?
00:12~00:14 Everyone wants to eat.
00:14~00:18 First of all, do you guys have money?
00:18~00:24 We came to Japan for the Emperor. We really don't have enough food.
00:24~00:27 Don't be confused.
00:27~00:30 Do you think you can get some food if you say like that?
00:38~00:41 It's rotten.
00:41~00:43 We can still eat it.
00:43~00:46 How can they treat us like that.
00:46~00:50 Why do they look down on us Koreans.
00:50~00:52 I know how you feel.
00:52~00:58 But what we have to do now is to survive.
Starting in 1944, Japan started conscription of Koreans into the armed forces. All Korean males were drafted to either join the Imperial Japanese Army, as of April 1944, or work in the military industrial sector, as of September 1944. Before 1944, 18,000 Koreans passed the examination for induction into the army. Koreans provided workers to mines and construction sites around Japan. The number of conscripted Koreans reached its peak in 1944 in preparation for war. From 1944, about 200,000 Korean males were inducted into the army. The number of Korean military personnel was 242,341, and 22,182 of them died during World War II.
Source:
Korea under Japanese rule - Wikipedia
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