By Noralyn O. Dudt
The "what ifs"
have been visiting me lately, especially this past year when we were
"forever" home, in lockdown with the Corona. It is a lingering mental
preoccupation, making me pause, thinking what could have been, what would have
been had an event happened or not.
The venue of this
special celebration was at the port of Baltimore, Maryland, only half an hour
drive away from Washington DC, a venue rather unique as almost all of embassy
social functions are held either at the massive and elegant ambassador's
residence or at the Embassy of Japan in Washington. But this event was indeed
unique, with top officials and the diplomatic community in attendance. And it
carried a lot of symbolism; just as Commodore Perry audaciously sailed into
Tokyo Bay 150 years earlier, the Japanese ship SETOGIRI (a Destroyer class
support ship for Japanese submarines) was sailing into the Baltimore harbor for
this special occasion. The celebration
was going to be held on this ship!
As we clambered up the
makeshift ladder to the ship, I wondered how long the ship took to make the
voyage from its port in Japan to Baltimore, Maryland. It would have had to
cross the vast Pacific, cut through the Panama Canal to get to the Atlantic and
sail up along the North American coast. Ambassador Kato opened the celebration with a
speech, "Ladies and Gentlemen, welcome to our reception commemorating the
century and a half of Japan's opening to Western powers." He went on to
say that it was in 1854 when the Kanagawa Treaty was signed, ending the 200
years of Japanese isolation. "I stand here with you today, in a western
suit and speaking in English as a result of that treaty," he
continued. Looking at the beaming faces
in the audience, I began to surmise, "hmmm how would Ambassador Kato look
in a samurai garb? With a katana? And seeing the Japanese Navy in their "western-style"
uniforms, my mind wandered to Hokusai's block prints depicting Japan's Edo
Period: the kimono, the topknot haircut called 'chonmage', the beautiful art
screens (byobu), the calligraphy, the
ikebana and other cultural arts that the Japanese developed and perfected
during their 200 years of isolation.
Commodore Matthew
Perry certainly knew how to impress the Japanese. He wanted to showcase what
Western culture looked like. He brought the Navy band to play the Star-Spangled
Banner, and chefs to prepare an elaborate banquet on his ship so he could
invite the Japanese officials to a Western meal. He brought gifts that he thought would
dazzle: a working model of a steam locomotive, a telescope, a telegraph, wines
and liquors. And dazzled the Japanese nobility, he did. Japan opened up and 110
years later became the second biggest economy in the world—an economic
powerhouse that designed and built cars and other electronics in addition to
crafting and building the most advanced trains in the world. What if Japan
decided against opening? What if Commodore Perry's diplomatic approach didn't
pan out? Ahh...the what if!
Another of my
"what ifs " that keeps me awake part of the night: in 2017 Phil and I
were very fortunate to have been invited
to join a group of Germans from the
parish of Dr. Joerg Mosig's Alt-Hastedt Kirchengemeinde of Bremen on a bus tour
to the Luther sites in Central Germany: Eisleben where the Reformer Martin Luther was born; the Wartburg Castle in Eisenach where Luther
was "hidden" and protected by
Frederick the Wise (Friedrich der Weise) who staged Luther's
"kidnapping" after he was declared heretic by the Pope. It was there
where he translated the New Testament Bible into German; in Wittenberg where he
lectured and where he later posted and nailed his 95 Theses on the door of the
Schloss Kirche (Castle church). The year 2017 was the 500th anniversary
of the 1517 Reformation when Martin Luther, the Augustinian monk and outspoken university
lecturer challenged the Church of Rome. It took some years of uncertainty, but
Luther persevered despite being harassed and threatened with excommunication
and even death. Others who exhibited the same level of audacity to protest and
challenge earlier were excommunicated and burned at the stake. Such fate
awaited Luther but he would not recant. What would our world be today if he
recanted? It would certainly be a different world. The Protestant Reformation propelled the
spread of literacy—Martin Luther knew that free access to the Bible demanded
the development of reading skills. With
that in mind, Luther encouraged the State to provide stability to education by
undertaking and supporting primary and secondary schools. Thus, the idea of
public education was born. What if......."where" would we be today?
Over two decades ago,
my family had a chance to travel to the Spanish province of Andalucia. It was
there in the Andalucian town of Sevilla where centuries ago, Columbus and the
other Spanish conquistadores launched their sails to the New World. It was also
there where Magellan, a Portuguese national, decided to become a citizen of the
Spanish crown after King Manuel of Portugal refused to fund his planned
expedition to the Spice Islands. His
persistence paid off when King Charles gave him the "green light."
After all, King Charles was the grandson of Queen Isabela and King Philip, the
far-sighted monarchs who financed Columbus’ voyage to the New World.
As we all know, the
Philippines would not be the Islas Filipinas that we know today had the King of
Spain refused to finance such a long voyage across two big oceans. Fernando
Magallanes finally landed on the island of Mactan in 1521. And the rest as we
all know... is history. I am obsessed with the what ifs. To think that one wrong 'turn' or two right
'turns', a left 'turn', or even a U-turn could have altered what we know of our
world today, is definitely amazing. And there is no end to the "what
ifs".
Noralyn Onto Dudt has always had a penchant for
travel and her former students love to indulge her with this passion. Long
before the pandemic, she frequently took the 14 hour-flight to Tokyo from
Washington, DC., and the 7-8 hour- flight to Germany and France. She can't wait
for the pandemic to end so she can go back there again. She says, " even
though I did not spend my youth there, going there is like "going
home."
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