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The Forgotten Holocaust —- Nanjing Massacre

Between December 13th, 1937 and January 1938 ,one of the worst massacres in modern times took place. Japanese troops captured the Chinese city of Nanjing and embarked on a campaign of murder, rape and looting.

Bodies of Chinese laid in ditch

Thousands of bodies were buried in ditches

Based on estimates made by historians and charity organisations in the city at the time, between 300,000 and 350,000 people were killed, many of them women and children.

The number of women raped was said by Westerners who were there to be 20,000, and there were widespread accounts of civilians being hacked to death.

Yet many Japanese officials and historians deny there was a massacre on such a scale.

They admit that deaths and rapes did occur, but say they were on a much smaller scale than reported. And in any case, they argue, these things happen in times of war.

The Sino-Japanese Wars

In 1931, Japan invaded Chinese Manchuria following a bombing incident at a railway controlled by Japanese interests.

The Chinese troops were no match for their opponents and Japan ended up in control of great swathes of Chinese territory.

The following years saw Japan consolidate its hold, while China suffered civil war between communists and the nationalists of the Kuomintang. The latter were led by General Chiang Kai-shek, whose capital was at Nanjing.

Japanese troops in Nanjing

Japanese troops enter the city in triumph

Many Japanese, particularly some elements of the army, wanted to increase their influence and in July 1937, a skirmish between Chinese and Japanese troops escalated into full-scale war.

The Japanese again had initial success, but then there was a period of successful Chinese defence before the Japanese broke through at Shanghai and swiftly moved on to Nanjing.

Chiang Kai-shek’s troops had already left the city and the Japanese army occupied it without difficulty.

‘One of the great atrocities of modern times’

At the time, the Japanese army already had a reputation for brutality.

In the first Sino-Japanese War of 1894, the Japanese invaders empted the northeastern city of Lushun by killing more than 20,000 civilians, almost the city population. Thirty-eight were spared to bury the dead bodies.

During the Nanjing massacre, Japanese papers reported competitions among junior officers to kill the most Chinese.

There probably is no crime that has not been committed in this city today

Minnie Vautrin
US woman in Nanjing

One Japanese newspaper correspondent saw lines of Chinese being taken for execution on the banks of the Yangtze River, where he saw piles of burned corpses.

Photographs from the time, now part of an exhibition in the city, show Japanese soldiers standing, smiling, among heaps of dead bodies.

Tillman Durdin of the New York Times reported the early stages of the massacre before being forced to leave.

He later wrote: “I was 29 and it was my first big story for the New York Times. So I drove down to the waterfront in my car. And to get to the gate I had to just climb over masses of bodies accumulated there.”

“The car just had to drive over these dead bodies. And the scene on the river front, as I waited for the launch… was of a group of smoking, chattering Japanese officers overseeing the massacring of a battalion of Chinese captured troops.”

“They were marching about in groups of about 15, machine-gunning them.”

As he departed, he saw 200 men being executed in 10 minutes to the apparent enjoyment of Japanese military spectators.

He concluded that the rape of Nanjing was “one of the great atrocities of modern times”.

‘The memories cannot be erased’

A Christian missionary, John Magee, described Japanese soldiers as killing not only “every prisoner they could find but also a vast number of ordinary citizens of all ages”.

“Many of them were shot down like the hunting of rabbits in the streets,” he said.

map

Map indicates where Nanjing is located.

After what he described as a week of murder and rape, the Rev Magee joined other Westerners in trying to set up an international safety zone.

Another who tried to help was an American woman, Minnie Vautrin, who kept a diary which has been likened to that of Anne Frank.

Her entry for 16 December reads: “There probably is no crime that has not been committed in this city today. Thirty girls were taken from the language school [where she worked] last night, and today I have heard scores of heartbreaking stories of girls who were taken from their homes last night – one of the girls was but 12 years old.”

Later, she wrote: “How many thousands were mowed down by guns or bayoneted we shall probably never know. For in many cases oil was thrown over their bodies and then they were burned.”

“Charred bodies tell the tales of some of these tragedies. The events of the following ten days are growing dim. But there are certain of them that lifetime will not erase from my memory and the memories of those who have been in Nanjing through this period.”

Minnie Vautrin suffered a nervous breakdown in 1940 and returned to the US. She committed suicide in 1941.

Also horrified at what he saw was John Rabe, a German who was head of the local Nazi party.

He became leader of the international safety zone and recorded what he saw, some of it on film, but this was banned by the Nazis when he returned to Germany.

He wrote about rape and other brutalities which occurred even in the middle of the supposedly protected area.

Confession and denial

After the Second World War was over, one of the Japanese soldiers who was in Nanjing spoke about what he had seen.

Japanese soldier in Nanjing

Japanese troops showed little mercy

Azuma Shiro recalled one episode: “There were about 37 old men, old women and children. We captured them and gathered them in a square.”

“There was a woman holding a child on her right arm… and another one on her left.”

“We stabbed and killed them, all three – like potatoes in a skewer. I thought then, it’s been only one month since I left home… and 30 days later I was killing people without remorse.”

Mr Shiro suffered for his confession: “When there was a war exhibition in Kyoto, I testified. The first person who criticized me was a lady in Tokyo. She said I was damaging those who died in the war.”

“She called me incessantly for three or four days. More and more letters came and the attack became so severe… that the police had to provide me with protection.”

Such testimony, however, has been discounted at the highest levels in Japan.

Former Justice Minister Shigeto Nagano denied that the massacre had occurred, claiming it was a Chinese fabrication.

Professor Ienaga Saburo spent many years fighting the Japanese government in the courts with only limited success for not allowing true accounts of Japanese war atrocities to be given in school textbooks.

There is also opposition to the idea among ordinary Japanese people. A film called Don’t Cry Nanjing was made by Chinese and Hong Kong film-makers in 1995 but it was several years before it was shown in Japan.

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Refugee Crisis on the North Korea-China Border

In preparation for next summer’s Beijing Olympics, the government of China has stepped up its repatriation of North Korean refugees in an effort to eradicate them before the end of 2007.

Dozens of protestors, most of whom are Korean, demonstrated in front of Embassy of China in Washington DC to urge Chinese government to stop forcing North Korean refugees back to North Korea to face certain torture, imprisonment and even execution for fleeing their homeland.

According to North Korea Freedom Coalition (NKFC), who organized the demonstration, China also jails humanitarian workers who try to help refugees, refuses the UN High Commission for Refugees access to the North Korean asylum seeders, and blocks the refugees from seeking resettlement in countries willing to resettle them.

At the rally, Suzanne Scholte, Chairwoman of NKFC, said North Korean refugee crisis is the most solvable refugee crisis in the world today, for the North Korean refugee are the only refugee population that have a place to go as they have South Korean citizenship under the Republic of Korea constitution and the United States has consistently offered resettlement for those who qualify.

In a letter sent to the president of People’s Republic of China Hu Jintao, NKFC requests that China comply with its international obligations in its treatment of these refugees, specifically the 1951 U.N. Convention on Refugees and its 1967 Protocol, which oblige China not the repatriate these refugees.

Steve Kim, who used to be a businessman, was imprisoned in China for four years for the crime of helping North Korean refugees safely reach South Korea. He was released two months ago, and he said China’s violent treatment of North Korean refugees and humanitarian workers kills the spirit of the Olympics.

Currently, it is believed that an average of 100 to 200 North Koreans each week are being repatriated against their will by Chinese authorities to North Korea.