Memorial hall bears witness to Japanese aggression (china.org.cn) Updated: 2005-05-08 15:00 Zhu Chengshan, curator of the
Nanjing Memorial Hall of Compatriots Murdered in the Nanjing Massacre, denounced
Tuesday Japanese actions to modify history textbooks in an attempt to launder
the country's militaristic past.
"The modified history textbooks advocate and justify aggression and deny the
Nanjing Massacre. It is dreadful that Japan defiles their descendants with the
distorted view that it was a victim in World War II," Zhu said.
Zhu made the remarks on China's Pure Brightness Festival, an occasion to
honor dead family members, which falls on Tuesday this year.
A queue of 10,000 mourners snaked around the Nanjing Memorial Hall in east
China's Jiangsu Province to commemorate victims killed by Japanese invaders in
the Nanjing Massacre.
The mourners comprised of local residents, people from other parts of China
and foreigners, including some from Japan, the Republic of Korea and some other
Asian countries. In silent reverence, mourners prayed for the dead, reminisced
about history and appealed for peace.
More than 300,000 Chinese civilians and captivated Chinese soldiers were
slain in the Nanjing Massacre, which occurred after the intruding Japanese
troops occupied Nanjing, then the capital of China, on Dec. 13, 1937. About
20,000 women were raped and one third of the houses in the city were burned down
in the six-week atrocity, which is considered one of the three bloodiest
massacres of World War II.
The Nanjing municipal government built a memorial hall at the Jiangdong Gate,
where 300,000 civilians and army troops were killed during the infamous
massacre, in 1985 in memory of the victims.
She Ziqing, a descendant of one victim, came to the Nanjing Memorial Hall
early this morning to pay respect to his mother who died in the massacre.
Tears flowed freely when the 76-year-old man stood in front of the wall,
nicknamed "Cry Wall", engraved with the names of victims.
He said, "When Japanese soldiers invaded Nanjing from the Zhonghua (China)
Gate on Dec. 13, 1937, they killed anyone they saw. Seeing a crowd of scared
people fleeing to the riverside of Yangtze, Japanese soldiers strafed them with
machine guns. The blood of the victims turned the clear river red."
"My father was fortunately away from home during the massacre, and the
children in our family ran to the US Embassy. But my poor mother was killed by
Japanese troops. In those days, many streets were piled high with corpses. It
was too horrifying to look at," he added.
Xia Shuqin, another mourner, said, "Japanese soldiers killed seven members in
my family within 20 minutes. Only my younger sister and I narrowly escaped. But,
my back and an arm were stabbed by a bayonet and the scars are still left on my
skin."
Many other mourners can also clearly remember the tragedy. Wang Xiuying said
Japanese invaders filled a river course with corpses and rolled over the corpses
with trucks. Jiang Genfu said his elder sister was cut into two pieces from head
to toe with a bayonet after she refused to be raped.
Li Xiuying, a female victim who made her name known throughout China for
having the courage to sue a right-wing Japanese writer for defamation, was
pregnant at the time of Nanjing Massacre and suffered 37 stabs from Japanese
soldiers. Thanks to timely medical treatment by an American doctor named Robert
Wilson, Li survived, but lost her baby.
Some mourners came from Japan. Matsuoka Tamaki, a primary school teacher in
Osaka, comes to the Nanjing Memorial Hall of Compatriots Murdered in the Nanjing
Massacre every year and invites Chinese victims and historians to symposiums
held in Japanonce a year.
In her current visit to China, she presented the memorial hall with evidence
of Japanese aggression, including diaries of invading soldiers, military maps
and letters, collected from Japanese soldiers involved in the killing. She also
interviewed some victims in Nanjing together with a Japanese photographer.
She said that Japan brought untold disasters to the people of many Asian
countries. However, the Japanese government concealed its aggression in wartime
in domestic textbooks.
Another Japanese mourner, named Shiranishi Shinichiro, expresses respect for
the victims of the Nanjing Massacre by planting trees in Nanjing every year.
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