Most Europeans and Americans have heard of Pearl Harbor, but far fewer know what happened four years earlier in Nanking (Nanjing), China,
It was one of the worst atrocities of the 20th century.
On December 13, 1937, Imperial Japanese troops captured the then Chinese capital, what followed over the next six weeks is known as the Nanking Massacre, sometimes also called “The Rape of Nanking.”
Over 300,000 Chinese civilians and disarmed soldiers were brutally killed, for scale thats more than the combined death tolls of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Tens of thousands of women and little girls (some as young as 8, others very elderly) were systematically raped, Japanese soldiers even held contests to see who could rape the most victims.
Entire families were bayoneted, machine gunned, buried alive, or burned to death, soldiers used bound prisoners for bayonet practice.
A third of the city was burned to the ground. A small group of Westerners, including an American missionary, a German businessman (who was a also a Nazi Party member), and doctors, created a “Safety Zone” that probanly saved an estimated 250,000 lives while the massacre raged around them.
The world watched in real time as American and European newspapers ran front page stories, many diplomats also sent frantic cables as newsreels showed the horrific aftermath.
After the war, many of Japan’s top generals were tried and some hanged, but many perpetrators, and even the royal family member who allegedly issued the “kill all captives” order, were never punished.
Today the death toll is still debated in modern Japan, some politicians downplay or even deny it, which of course reopens old wounds with China and even Korea every few years.
Why does this matter in 2025?
Well, Because remembering Nanking isn’t about simply appointing balme, its about understand history and how it shapes modern policy and perceptions.
If you only knew about Pearl Harbor from the Pacific War, I hope this informs your thinking on the subject, and most importantly the suffering of millions of Chinese cIvillians during WW2. Up to 20 million Chinese died in that catastrophic conflict, second only to the Soviets.
It may also go some way to helping understand how Chinese / Japanese relations are colored by the past. As you now see, With very good reason.
@BowesChay Blah Blah...the world has Learned. This has not happened again since then. Stop crying. No one cares because most people only know about HITLER and the Nazis. Peasants were killed and people say, "oh". "sad".
@BowesChay 1
I'm a Japanese.
I'm ashamed of the same Japanese.
In fact, School in Japan hardly details history of genocide.
Of course, We have learned of history in text.
But Our study is for take an examination.
I think it is difficult of stay in our mind until adults.
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The Yasukuni Shrine is a shrine for war criminals. These are all major war criminals responsible for atrocities against the people in Asia and the rest of the world in WWII.
The nature of the issue concerning the Yasukuni Shrine is whether Japan is able to rightly perceive and deeply reflect on its history of militarist aggression, and whether it can learn lessons from history and avoid a repeat of that part of history.
There are 56 ethnicities in China—and 55 are getting squashed. A new law passed by the Chinese legislature is a grim milestone in the Communist Party’s harder-line approach to ethnic politics econ.st/4vK4oX4
@RT_com The Koreans enshrined at Yasukuni Shrine fought alongside Japan against Britain and its proxies, which aimed for the complete slave colonization of East Asia, and continued to protect East Asia.
However, because they resisted Britain, after Japan's defeat, the Korean Peninsula⇒
Korean man BUSTED at war shrine festival in Tokyo
Detained at Yasukuni Shrine festival with banner telling 'war criminals' to stop praying
He also staked claim on disputed Japan–South Korea island
In the 1970s, German Chancellor Willy Brandt knelt in Warsaw to atone for his nation's WWII sins.
Japan has never offered a full apology to its Asian neighbours, while its PM still honours war criminals at #Yasukuni Shrine by paying visits or sending offerings.
When will 🇯🇵 confront its past with the same courage?