logo
‘Woven air': Ancient fabric spun across history makes comeback amid lies and climate change

‘Woven air': Ancient fabric spun across history makes comeback amid lies and climate change

Straits Times11-07-2025
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Mr Peter Lee, a textile collector, has many 18th and 19th century muslin fabrics. Here, he holds a modern muslin sari he bought from Bangladesh's revival project.
The sari was gorgeous, sheer – and dubious. The advertisement said it was made of muslin, an elegant, luxuriously soft cotton fabric once favoured by Mughal and European queens.
Dr Pritha Dasmahapatra was intrigued: At 2,000 rupees (S$30), this would be a steal. But how was it possible?
This 46-year-old obstetrician from London and textile hobbyist, who grew up in Kolkata, India, has loved saris for as long as she can remember. She knew that muslin was a rare and exotic fabric, often called 'woven air' for its transparency and lightness. She also knew that it had many impostors.
Muslin was a wonder-cloth from erstwhile Bengal – now split between Bangladesh and West Bengal in India – patronised by Mughal royalty, worn by Roman nobles, loved by French queen Marie Antoinette and embroidered by author Jane Austen. Its sheerness was its glamour; it could famously pass through a ring but was so strong that a needle could not easily pierce it.
But the growing global demand for this miraculous fabric also led to its demise. Fine handwoven muslin vanished in the late 18th century, edged out by machine-made imitations in England and the extinction of the fragile indigenous cotton plant in the incessant floods of Dhaka. Expert spinners and weavers fell to debt bondage and the Indian census of 1901 says that many abandoned the loom for the plough.
So what is the muslin out there in the markets today?
In Singapore, baby swaddles, soft but thick, are sold as muslin. In the US, some people call thin cheesecloth or jam strainers muslin. It is thought in Europe to be the backdrop in photo studios. But these could not possibly be the same material that had enthralled the world's elite for a century.
Was muslin truly gone then, or was it hiding in plain sight? Dr Dasmahapatra had found a mystery she desperately needed to solve.
Finding old muslin
The hunt for answers took her to the Victoria and Albert Museum in London in 2022 , where she had completed a course on the textiles of South Asia some years earlier . The museum has an enviable collection of colonial-era muslin and, at Dr Dasmahapatra's request, the curator brought out four categories of muslin from the mid-1800s.
They had to be run on one's fingers – it was the only way to know the real deal.
'It was unlike any fabric I have ever touched – until then or since,' Dr Dasmahapatra told The Straits Times, adding that even average-grade muslin from the 1800s felt 'more luxurious than the best cotton we are used to today'.
The finest muslin, the mulmul khas reserved for royalty, was so translucent and weightless that she understood why court poets described it as morning dew. She could barely feel it on her skin.
It was so airy not because muslin is a loose weave, but because it is densely packed with the finest, thinnest yarn – the kind that is still impossible to make in cloth mills or automated looms. The threads came from the cotton plant Gossypium arboreum var. neglecta – locally known as phuti karpas – that once grew near the Meghna river near Dhaka city , and gave the fabric its lightness and tensile strength .
Thousands of spinners – mostly women – and weavers from undivided Bengal used their skill, eagle-eyes and dextrous fingers to turn this brittle raw cotton into the finest quality fabric in the world in at least 16 time-consuming steps.
'Historic muslin might have had a thread count of at least 1,000 to 1,800 per square inch,' Dr Dasmahapatra said. To compare, a premium cotton shirt from a designer brand today has a thread count of not more than 80 to 100.
'All muslin is transparent and soft, but not everything transparent is muslin,' she added.
Dr Dasmahapatra learnt that muslin wasn't yet another handmade item that had become less perfect with time. Without phuti karpas and highly skilled spinners and weavers, high-quality muslin is legitimately painstaking – and almost impossible – to make today.
But it has not stopped people from trying. Even though the fabric that fell like water over the body is no more, muslin's brand and legend still endure, not just as a promise of textile magic or coveted piece of luxury, but almost as an unreachable ideal.
Dr Pritha Dasmahapatra on one of her research trips from London to villages in West Bengal's weaving zones.
PHOTO: COURTESY OF PRITHA DASMAHAPATRA
Revival in Bangladesh
To some, like Mr Saiful Islam, muslin was a piece of lost heritage that had to be resurrected.
The engineer and former businessman living in London was incensed that the best pieces of Bengal muslin were all stored in museums and private collections outside Bangladesh, where he is from.
'Muslin's story is one of immense attraction and enormous neglect. It was a world fabric once, and it came from Bengal. But we don't have even one sample of 18th-century muslin to our name,' he told ST.
Mr Islam wanted to not only set 'the distorted history' straight but also revive the legendary material.
'I saw it as a symbolic restoration of our identity,' he said , wanting the world to see Bangladesh as beyond a hub for cheap fast fashion and garment sweatshops, and as home to the world's finest craftspeople .
First, the original cotton plant had to be found. No seed sample survived, but he found a pressed phuti karpas plant in London's Kew Gardens, a botanical museum. A small team went to Bangladesh in 2014, searching for look-alikes by boat along the Meghna river , in the areas records show phuti karpas used to grow .
In 2017, they found one wild cotton plant near Dhaka, whose maple-like leaves looked excitingly similar to the painting they had. Genome matching in London and India resulted in a match – 'not a 100 per cent but good enough at 70 per cent'.
Mr Saiful Islam comparing a painting from Kew Gardens of the extinct phuti karpas plant, with a modern day variant in the fields near river Meghna in Bangladesh.
PHOTO: COURTESY OF DRIK-BENGAL MUSLIN
Mr Islam's team tried to farm this rare wild cotton and succeeded after a few failed experiments.
With trained master weavers and spinners, his organisation, Bengal Muslin, has been gradually climbing the thread count from 100, 200, 300 to now producing a few grand samples of extremely fine muslin with 400 thread count , some of them even with intricately hand-embroidered jamdani patterns unique to Bangladesh .
Mr Islam calls it 'new muslin'. 'Our idea is not to commercialise muslin or make an industry. It is just to recapture the history and heritage, and recognise the time, artists and talents it takes to create this beautiful item.'
As Mr Islam's grand feat became the toast of textile nerds, in 2022, Singapore's textile collector and researcher Peter Lee quickly bought an off-white 300-count 'new muslin' sari – the highest count at the time.
The honorary curator of the National University of Singapore's Baba House, who has been collecting Asian textiles since the nineties, said he was drawn to muslin due to its 'historical mystique and aesthetic of transparency and fineness' that made it utterly stylish.
The muslin bought from a revival project in Bangladesh by Mr Peter Lee, a textile collector and curator.
ST PHOTO: KEVIN LIM
In his collection, Mr Lee has a muslin sari made for the Deccani court with silver embroidery called khamdani, Dhaka jamdani saris made in the 20th century, muslin dresses and scarves exported to Europe in the 18th and 19th century, and even one 19th-century muslin dress made for the Malay world.
'It was so modern to see cotton so fine,' he said. As he learnt more about muslin, Mr Lee said he realised that the storied fabric was a glorious example of 'global connections that defy boundaries'.
Reborn in skilled hands
Across Bangladesh's borders in India, muslin's recent revival is focused on the hands that make it.
In Devipur village in West Bengal's Bardhaman district, Mr Sambhunath Guin stopped the rhythmic clack-clackety-clack of his wooden loom to twist a broken thread of shiny cotton. Readjusting his spectacles, he said dreamily that India had just sent an astronaut from Bengal to space.
'How far man has come! We are doing things that seemed impossible before,' he said.
Mr Guin, 60, and his spinner wife Kuheli, 48, do the impossible for eight to 12 hours daily – they make muslin with a 500 to 550 thread count, arguably the highest in the world right now. Only a handful of people in the world can do this, textile experts told ST.
Weaver Sambhunath Guin and his spinner wife Kuheli Guin are among the few in the world who can expertly make 500-thread count muslin.
ST PHOTO: ROHINI MOHAN
Fine muslin beyond a 200 thread count cannot be spun or woven in machines. Even today, the cotton must be spun in a hand-operated wheel called a charkha , delicate hands and sharp eyes arresting the frequently snapping fibres . Then, a person with decades of skill makes the dense warp and weft on a typical Bengali-style pit loom , starching every few centimetres with a homemade rice gum for durability .
Mr Guin inherited the skill from his father and grandfather , who may have woven muslin for export or local elites . Mrs Guin said the couple work at dawn and through dusk, because cool, humid weather keeps the fibres stuck and high temperatures dry them out.
They are often able to make only a single, perfect metre of plain muslin in a single day.
Today, the Guins are among a handful of artists in the world who produce the highest-quality muslin for the Matiary Kutir Shilpa Pratisthan, a government-certified cooperative that has trained 77 spinners and 35 weavers to make muslin over the past five years.
Unlike their Bangladesh counterpart, Mr Subhasis Chakraborty, the Pratishthan's secretary, said that their weavers and spinners use suvin cotton, an extra-long fibre cotton grown in South India's Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu states.
The cooperative is facilitating the West Bengal government's Project Muslin, an initiative established in 2018 to revive muslin. It has trained around 500 spinners and weavers to make muslin with a higher than 400 thread count , invested in traditional looms and spinning wheels, and expanded muslin's market around the country.
The West Bengal state government has focused its efforts on nine districts including Nadia, Malda, Murshidabad and Santipur, the very regions of Bengal, along with Dhaka, which once wove fine muslin of world renown. In 2024, the Indian government gave muslin from this region a geographical indication tag, which means that only cotton with over 200 thread count from these districts can be called muslin.
'We found some weavers and spinners who have inherited the knowledge of producing muslin – we want to grow their numbers , before more of them quit the trade amid stagnant incomes to work at malls, farms and construction sites ,' said Mr Mridul Haldar, the chief executive of the West Bengal Khadi and Village Industries Board that helms Project Muslin.
What's heartbreaking, though, is that the world's most sought-after muslin artisans like the Guins earn barely 8,000 rupees a month. They are paid around 3,600 rupees for the standard 11 metres of 500-count white muslin, which takes them 15 days to produce.
Living on the edge of poverty, the Guins were forced to take microfinance loans for their two daughters' weddings and their half-built house has been gathering moss for five years as they save up to afford doors, paint and tiles .
The Pratisthan sells the fabric at a wholesale rate of 4,350 rupees per metre. In retail stores in Kolkata, ST found the same fabric sold for 6,000 to 8,000 rupees per metre.
At the Biswa Bangla store in Kolkata's Park Street, a middle-aged woman marvelled at a lemon yellow muslin sari woven with silver embroidery, but when she heard the price – 130,000 rupees – she dropped it like a hot potato. 'For a cotton sari?' she mumbled. A regular cotton sari can cost between 300 and 10,000 rupees.
Muslin today
Muslin is seeing a resurrection today, but the fabric's slow, fussy, handmade essence stands in contrast to our fast, consumerist lives. In that very contrast lies muslin's allure – and its struggle.
Ms Rajeswari Mavuri, who runs the boutique Label Rama in Hyderabad, sources muslin from West Bengal weavers for her well-heeled customers in India and France , for whom handmade spells luxury .
'Very few people understand that handcrafted goods are premium. Hundreds of brands say they are sustainable but use chemical dyes, use polyester or silk threads in muslin yardage, or pass off loosely woven unstarched cotton as muslin,' she said.
Mr Biren Kumar Basak, a national award-winning master weaver from Fulia, who works with muslin specialists to create meenakari jamdani , said: 'There is no shortage of demand or respect for muslin today, but most customers do not want to pay the high rates.
'I can name the 500-count weavers left in Bengal. They are all aged. In 10 years, who knows if anyone will be left to make muslin,' he added.
Several spinners and weavers told ST that they did not want their children to continue the profession.
Mr Badal Rai and his wife Chobi Rai, who make 300 to 400 thread count muslin in Nabadwip, told ST they educated their son 'to get smart enough to get a government job'. Mr Tinku Basak in Fulia in West Bengal worried every time his nine-year-old daughter came to hang around the wooden loom he has spent his lifetime on. 'This is beautiful work, but it is also thankless, low-paying work,' he said.
When customers don't pay the right rates, cheaper versions fill the market.
Dr Dasmahapatra said that ever since muslin made a comeback, she has had a feeling of deja vu.
'Everything we blamed the British for, we are doing today. Muslin ceased to exist because they wanted it cheap and fast, which was not sustainable, leading to weavers being underpaid and overworked, the handwoven stuff losing finesse, and cheap knock-offs filling the pent-up demand. We are repeating that now,' she told ST.
She said stories of muslin revival and curiosity about its famed softness 'are creating Fomo (fear of missing out) among textile lovers, but since most cannot afford real muslin, they buy fake ones'.
A balance between pricing and demand is key to protecting the exclusivity of muslin, she felt.
'Ownership is not the point. Have an interest in the textile, be mesmerised by its beauty , marvel at something that is the pinnacle of human skill . Everyone doesn't need to buy it.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

With a shovel and a dream, woman finds 2.3 carat diamond in Arkansas
With a shovel and a dream, woman finds 2.3 carat diamond in Arkansas

Straits Times

time2 hours ago

  • Straits Times

With a shovel and a dream, woman finds 2.3 carat diamond in Arkansas

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Of 366 diamonds registered so far in 2025, only 11 weighed more than a carat. NEW YORK - By the end of her trip, Ms Micherre Fox had almost made peace with the fact that she would leave Arkansas with nothing but bug bites and tattered hiking boots. For three weeks, Ms Fox, who lives in New York City, had been camping at Crater of Diamonds State Park and going out to dig for gems each day. She rose before dawn, paid the US$15 (S$19) entry fee, walked the half-mile to the fields with her battered tools, and dug, sifted and rinsed until her hands ached. She was on a mission: to find a diamond for her engagement ring. Wake, walk, work, hope. Repeat. On her last day there, she slept in and planned to search for an amethyst instead. 'I was coming to terms with the fact I was likely leaving without a diamond,' she said. But then, as she carried her fourth bucket of dirt to the water pool where diggers rinse their finds, she saw a glimmer in a spider web on the ground, nudging it with her boot. But what looked like glistening dew did not rub off. In fact, it was a shiny stone. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. World No peace deal, but 'great progress' made in meeting with Putin over Ukraine war: Trump World Made-for-TV pageantry in Alaska as Trump brings Putin in from the cold Singapore Nowhere to run: Why Singapore needs to start protecting its coasts now Singapore Using nature, multi-use structures among solutions being studied to protect Singapore coastlines Asia Magnitude 4.9 earthquake strikes near east coast of Australia, EMSC says Singapore HSA evaluating rapid urine test kits to enable faster detection of etomidate, found in Kpods Asia Move over, Labubu – Chiikawa is the new craze in Hong Kong Later that day, after sharing the news with her boyfriend, Ms Fox cried tears of joy: 'I'm just like: Oh my God. That was an impossible thing, and I did it and I am proud of that.' Crater of Diamonds Park officials later confirmed: Ms Fox, 31, had found a 2.3-carat white diamond, the third-largest find this year. Of 366 diamonds registered so far in 2025, only 11 weighed more than a carat. Ms Micherre Fox holds a 2.3-carat uncut white diamond she dug up at Arkansas' Crater of Diamonds State Park. PHOTO: ARKANSAS STATE PARKS/NYTIMES Ms Annie Dye, a gemologist based in New York state, said that depending on the final cut, clarity, color and carat weight, the diamond could be worth anywhere from US$10,000 to US$50,000. The couple have yet to get it appraised, so its precise value remains unknown. Each year, about 160,000 people, on average, come to Crater of Diamonds State Park, about a 180km drive southwest from Little Rock, in hopes of digging up a diamond they can keep. Most days, diggers take their finds to the park's experts to learn what they found. The park has a 'finders, keepers' policy, making anything they dig up theirs to take home at no added cost. But often, it's one of three less-valuable rocks: smooth brown jasper; angular quartz; or soft and brittle calcite. Every so often, someone makes a historic find. Like, Mr Bobbie Oskarson, of Longmont, Colorado, who found a white, 8.52-carat diamond in June 2015. Ms Fox, who had just graduated with a master's degree in management from Fordham University in New York, had come for adventure and to find a jewelry piece she could dig from the ground herself. When she and her partner began to talk about marriage two years ago, she quickly realised she wanted to find a diamond rather than buy one. In addition to avoiding the exploitative diamond mining industry, this stone would represent the kind of work marriage would require, she felt, and show her commitment. 'There are countless things that will happen that you can't just solve with money,' she said, 'and in those moments, you need to be able to roll your sleeves up and show up every day and do really hard work to keep that thing going.' For her, 'this was an opportunity for me to symbolically commit to doing that work,' she added. There were setbacks. About a week in, she got bitten up by chiggers, which left her itching for weeks. Almost a week later, her hand shovel was stolen, forcing her to dig with her bare hands until her nails were worn down. Two days after that, the soles of her brown boots flapped, like old paint peeling from a wall, with each step. 'Socks were probably peeking out like two days after that,' Ms Fox said. Still, the field called. By midmorning of final day, after more than 12km of walking to a nearby town to treat herself to an iced latte, she reached the 37 acres of plowed brown fields. It was then that she came across what looked like a spider web beaded with dew in the dirt. With a hint of reluctance, she bent down, still carrying a heavy bucket, and picked up what she thought would turn out to be a mica stone. Small as a canine tooth, it caught the light differently. Oily, metallic. 'I kept telling myself, 'It's just glass with silver paint,'' she said. She clinched the stone in her fist, dirt still clinging to her hands. Around her, the field hummed with the quiet industry of strangers who did not yet know that a diamond had just left the ground. She began the walk to the gemologist's office. A three-minute stroll, she recalled, that felt closer to 30. She kept her pace slow. Trying to stay level and not get her hopes up. At the gemologist's desk, where most hopefuls learn in seconds they do not have a diamond, she placed the stone on the counter. Instead of a quick no, there was movement – staff members summoned, the stone carried to a back room. Eventually, they called her in: It was a white diamond, more than 2 carats. Ms Fox asked for a moment alone to share the experience with her boyfriend, Trevor Ballou, 37, before continuing to answer more questions from the state park's staff about the diamond. In a quiet room, the relief and exhaustion hit her at once, she said. After days of heat, hard soil and the constant weight of possible failure, she let the moment wash over her. The ache in her muscles, the grit in her hands and the improbable reward glinting in the light. She fell to a knee, her fist pressed into the ground, tears running down her face. 'I crumbled,' Ms Fox said. 'My head was bent to the ground and my eyes were wet, and I'm just like: Oh my God. That was an impossible thing, and I did it and I am proud of that.' Carrying the diamond in a small box nestled in a fanny pack strapped across her chest, she flew home from Arkansas with a sense of triumph the next day. Back in New York, at their apartment in Manhattan's West Village, her boyfriend was waiting with her favorite french fries from Bubby's, a popular home-style American eatery. 'I hunted this for you,' she said, and then presented him with a box containing the diamond. Now the ball is in Mr Ballou's court. When is he going to propose, and what's his plan? In an interview, he said: 'I'll say this, I certainly have to find a way to live up to this now. She's dealt her cards and now it's my turn to put together something impressive, and I'm really looking forward to that.' Any diamond over 2 carats found at the Crater of Diamonds State Park gets a name. This one is named the Fox-Ballou Diamond, after the couple's last names. Now, it just needs a ring. NYTIMES

80 years after 1945, Japan finds its memories of WWII fading
80 years after 1945, Japan finds its memories of WWII fading

Straits Times

time18 hours ago

  • Straits Times

80 years after 1945, Japan finds its memories of WWII fading

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox People releasing white doves at the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo as Japan marks the 80th anniversary of its surrender in World War II on Aug 15. – As Japan marks 80 years since its surrender in World War II on Aug 15, 1945, the country's collective memory of its role in the global conflagration – and the catastrophic defeat it suffered – is fading fast. The voices of living veterans, such as 95-year-old Hideo Shimizu, and atomic bomb survivors, like 86-year-old Michiyo Yagi, are fast disappearing. How Japan will remember its imperial past and the war's influence on the nation's psyche is now becoming a pressing concern. Ms Yagi, a 'hibakusha' who experienced the devastation of her native Nagasaki on Aug 9, 1945, counts her family – her mother and four siblings – fortunate to have survived the blast, although they endured prolonged bouts of debilitating diarrhoea in its aftermath. Hibakusha is the term used to designate survivors of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. 'Historically, Japan certainly has made mistakes, and those mistakes are our burden to bear as wartime aggressors,' Ms Yagi told The Straits Times. 'It is our responsibility to remember, to convey our experiences, to fight for peace and to lobby for a world without nuclear weapons,' she said, expressing her deepest wish for Nagasaki to remain the last city on Earth to suffer the horrors of an atomic bomb. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Ong Beng Seng fined $30k in case linked to ex-minister Iswaran after judge cites judicial mercy Asia Sun Haiyan, ex-China ambassador to S'pore, detained for questioning: Sources Singapore Jail for drink-driving cop in hit-and-run accident, victim suffered multiple fractures Life How do household bomb shelters in Singapore really work? Life Blank canvas: JTC offers black-and-white bungalows for lease at Rochester Park Singapore Fresh launches drive surge in new private home sales in July 'The youngest hibakusha is now 80, and soon there will not be many of us left. Looking at the perilous state of the world today, I honestly feel really scared.' Ms Yagi is one of just 99,130 remaining hibakusha, whose average age now stands at 86 years, according to official figures released on March 31. For the first time, their numbers have dipped below 100,000. The atomic bomb was a weapon of unprecedented destructive power that obliterated the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Then-Emperor Hirohito, in a nationwide radio broadcast announcing Japan's surrender at noon on Aug 15, 1945, starkly described it as 'a new and most cruel bomb', acknowledging that ' the war situation has developed not necessarily to Japan's advantage'. In the present day, a year-long series of war memorial events culminates in the Memorial Ceremony for the War Dead on Aug 15, although the surrender documents were only formally signed on Sept 2, 1945. At the annual ceremony, where a minute's silence was observed at 12pm, Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba was the first leader in 13 years to express 'remorse for the war' in his memorial speech. 'We must never repeat the horrors of war. We must never again err on the path we take,' Mr Ishiba said. 'We must now deeply engrave in our hearts the remorse and lessons of that war.' He added: 'No matter how much time passes, we will continue to pass on the painful memories of war and our resolute pledge to never wage war again across generations and continue to take action towards lasting peace.' This pacifist message was reiterated by Emperor Naruhito, who said: 'Looking back on the long period of post-war peace, reflecting on our past and bearing in mind the feelings of deep remorse, I earnestly hope that the ravages of war will never again be repeated.' Elsewhere in the region, Japan's surrender was marked with both Koreas commemorating National Liberation Day on Aug 15. China, meanwhile, is set to showcase its military strength at a 'Victory Parade' on Sept 3. What is evident is that 2025 is a crucial milestone anniversary, imbued with the added urgency of the advanced age of the last surviving first-hand witnesses to the war's horrors. Japan's surrender and the subsequent US Occupation from 1945 to 1952 irrevocably shaped the nation's psyche. The 1947 Constitution, drafted by the US, remains the oldest unamended supreme law in the world and set Japan on the path of pacifism. The Emperor, once a godlike figure, was reduced to a ceremonial figurehead. The battle was directed by admirals and generals in war rooms, but fought by indoctrinated foot soldiers who were prepared to lay down their lives. Living veterans, now numbering a mere 792 – a stark drop from 1.4 million in the 1980s – continue to bear profound scars. Mr Hideo Shimizu, 95 , a former member of the notorious Unit 731, made headlines in China when he visited a memorial in the northeastern city of Harbin in August 2024 and bowed in apology. He recounted feeling powerless to go against his superiors' orders, having been assigned to what was the Imperial Japanese Army's biological warfare unit, and remains haunted by nightmares from witnessing human specimens. Tokyo's official position has been to acknowledge Unit 731's existence but cites a lack of conclusive documentation in refusing to confirm or deny human experiments. In March, Mr Ishiba told Parliament: 'The means to verify facts have been lost with history.' Mr Shimizu, who broke his silence in 2015, continues to share his experiences publicly but suffers from slander and abuse from Japanese right-wing commentators online who deride him as a 'senile old man'. He told the Asahi Shimbun newspaper: 'If you say something did not happen 100 times, it becomes as if it really never did. That is more frightening.' Japan's discomfort with its history as a colonial power and wartime aggressor – coupled by a political shift to the right – is evident from how the subject is discussed in the country's history textbooks. Mr Ishiba recounted to a forum in May of a meeting with Singapore's then-Senior Minister Lee Kuan Yew at his home in 2008, when he attended the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore as defence minister. 'Mr Lee asked me, 'Do you know what Japan did in Singapore during WWII?',' Mr Ishiba said. 'I replied with the knowledge I learnt in history class at school. Mr Lee looked sad and said, 'Is that all you know?' I felt so ashamed that I began reading various books to learn about what had actually happened during the war.' His anecdote epitomises how the same historical events can be interpreted differently, with opposing versions sometimes written off as 'revisionism'. The divergence is stark even at home, when comparing Yushukan Museum next to Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo – which enshrines 2.5 million war dead, but is highly controversial for the 14 Class A war criminals in their midst – to the peace museums in Nagasaki or Okinawa. Despite Japan having previously made war apologies and reparations in accordance to international law and a consistent refusal to avoid being drawn into 'apology diplomacy', the country's hawkish shift has unnerved neighbouring countries. The likes of China, North Korea and South Korea believe that Tokyo has not adequately atoned for incidents like the Nanjing Massacre or its exploitation of wartime labour and 'comfort women', and the war is still an open festering wound that can be weaponised for nationalist purposes. Yet as Japan stands at the crossroads, what is undeniable is that the country has come to be relied upon by the US, as well as regions in Europe and South-east Asia as a stalwart defender of the existing rules-based international order in the Indo-Pacific, particularly to counter a more assertive China. But Shizuoka University historian M.G. Sheftall, an American who has lived in Japan for 40 years, said: 'Geostrategic realities of the 21st century aside, one factor behind this collective memory shift is the natural process of transgenerational historical amnesia.' He noted a 'wilful political and ideological effort' behind the amnesia , and added : 'What has been salient is the long slow decline of once canonical and sacrosanct Japanese postwar pacifism to a point where opinions that were absolutely unutterable in public 20 years ago are now openly expressed.' Still, Mr Tatsukuma Ueno, 97 , a former pilot of the Imperial Japanese Army's 66th Squadron, vows to keep talking about the war as long as he is able to. Peace comes at a premium and cannot be taken for granted, he told a news conference in July , adding: 'As a Japanese citizen, I am really happy to see that Japan has become what it is today. People have grown accustomed to peace. 'This is totally different from the environment in which I was brought up, and I think the fact that there is no war and peace prevails, is the best thing one can have.'

Stressed UK teens seek influencers' help for exams success
Stressed UK teens seek influencers' help for exams success

Straits Times

time20 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Stressed UK teens seek influencers' help for exams success

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Online study influencers are gaining popularity among stressed British teenagers in search of exam success. LONDON - Posing as a fortune teller on his YouTube channel, former teacher Waqar Malik tells thousands of followers that he can predict this year's exam questions. He is among online study influencers gaining popularity among stressed British teenagers in search of exam success. But educators and examiners are concerned some pupils are relying too much on online advice. Mr Malik posts videos on TikTok and YouTube forecasting questions on classic English literature for the UK GCSE school exam taken at 16. In 2024 'I predicted the entire paper,' he said on his popular Mr Everything English channel. Mr Malik, who says he is a former assistant head teacher, noted that he was just making an 'educated guess', but educators remain concerned. 'If you are a 15- or 16- year-old doing your GCSEs and you've got somebody in your phone who's telling you 'this is what the English exam is going to be about'... that is so appealing,' said Ms Sarah Brownsword, an assistant professor in education at the University of East Anglia. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Ong Beng Seng fined $30k for abetting former minister Iswaran in obstructing course of justice Life How do household bomb shelters in Singapore really work? Singapore Sengkang-Punggol LRT line resumes full service 4 hours after power fault halts trains Asia Johor authorities seize four Singapore-registered vehicles over illegal e-hailing Singapore Owners call for stronger management rules in ageing condos, but seek to avoid being overburdened Asia Japan's PM Ishiba mentions wartime 'regret', toeing right-wing line After British pupils sat their exams in May, some complained that Mr Malik's predictions were wrong. 'Never listening to you again bro,' one wrote, while others said they were 'cooked' (done for) and would have to work in a fast food restaurant. With GCSE results set to be released on Aug 21, one exam board, AQA, has warned of 'increasing reliance on certain online revision channels'. 'Clearly this is an important source of revision and support for students,' it said. But the examiners want 'your interpretation of the texts you have studied, not some stranger's views on social media'. 'Looking for help' Students are overloaded, school leaders said. 'With so much content to cover and revise in every subject it can be completely overwhelming,' Ms Sarah Hannafin, head of policy for the school leaders' union NAHT, told AFP. 'And so it is unsurprising that young people are looking for anything to help them to cope.' Mr Malik, whose prediction video has been viewed on YouTube 290,000 times, did not respond to a request for comment. Ms Brownsword praised TikTok, where she posts grammar videos for student teachers, and said: 'You can learn about anything and watch videos about absolutely anything'. Teachers have always flagged questions that could come up, she said, but predicting exam questions online is 'really tricky'. 'But I think there's a real difference between doing that and doing it on such a scale, when you've got thousands or tens of thousands or even hundreds of thousands of followers online.' Other content creators defended such videos, however. 'Those kind of videos were never to mislead,' said Ms Tilly Taylor, a university student posting TikTok videos with candid revision advice to 100,000 followers. 'I make it very clear in my videos that these are predictions,' based on past papers and examiners' reports, said Ms Taylor, who appeals to younger viewers with her fashionable eye makeup. Other content creators sell predicted papers 'all the time,' Ms Taylor said, but 'I don't think it's right.' Other educational influencers were more in favour. 'If you're marketing it as a predicted paper, that's completely fine... you just can't say guaranteed paper,' said Mr Ishaan Bhimjiyani, 20, who has over 400,000 TikTok followers. He promoted a site offering an English predicted paper for £1.99 (S$3.47) with a 'history of 60-70 per cent accuracy'. 'It took off' Predicted papers allow you to 'check whether you're actually prepared for the exam', said Ms Jen, a creator and former teacher who posts as Primrose Kitten and declined to give her surname. Her site charges £4.99 for an English predicted paper and includes a video on phrasing to score top marks. Mr Bhimjiyani, who went to a private school, started posting on TikTok at 16, saying he was 'documenting my journey, posting about how I revise'. 'And then it kind of took off.' He founded an educational influencer agency, Tap Lab, that now represents over 100 bloggers in their mid-teens to mid-20s. Influencers earn most from paid promotions – for recruiters or beauty or technology brands –- which must be labelled as such, he said. Mr Bhimjiyani made £5,000 with his first such video. Taylor said she recently promoted student accommodation. No one explained 'how do you actually revise', Taylor said of her school years. So she turned to YouTube for ideas. 'I wanted to help someone like myself,' she said, 'who couldn't necessarily afford to go to private school or have private tuition.' AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store