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China mourns for victims of Nanjing Massacre, wishes for eternal peace
NANJING—People across China,
particularly in Nanjing City, gathered on Thursday to mourn the victims
of the Nanjing Massacre, murdered by invading Japanese soldiers 70 years
ago, and to wish for eternal peace in the world.
The bell tolled and Nanjing was in grief as nearly 10,000 people
gathered in the eastern Chinese city at 10:00 a.m. to mourn the 300,000
lives killed by the Japanese invaders 70 years ago. The rally was held
at a square in front of the memorial hall for the Chinese victims
massacred by Japanese soldiers, with the crowd mourning the dead and
presenting wreaths.
The mourners, including local school children, college students,
survivors of the massacre and international friends, passed a Nanjing
peace declaration that calls on “all the peace-loving people to be
united in building a peaceful, harmonious and reconciliatory new world”.
More than 100 massacre survivors attended Thursday’s gathering. Xia
Shuqin, 77, told Xinhua that seven of her nine family members were
killed in the massacre.
“I was seriously wounded but fortunately survived,” she said. “I’ve been
here to mourn the dead every year on Dec. 13,” said Zhao Bin, 70. “We
can forget hatred, but we must not forget history.”
She Ziqing, 75, presented a bouquet to his mother, who was slaughtered
by the Japanese. “Seventy years on, the pain is always there,” he said
tearfully. “When the Japanese troops invaded Nanjing on Dec. 13, 1937,
they killed almost every Chinese in sight. Many people fled to the bank
of the Yangtze River but most of them were shot dead. My dad narrowly
escaped and crossed the river, but my mum, who stayed home, was killed,”
said the old man.
“The China-Japan relationship has developed comprehensively since the
two countries normalized their diplomatic ties 35 years ago,” said Xu
Zhonglin, chairman of the Jiangsu Provincial Committee of the Chinese
People’s Political Consultative Conference.
“But a few right wingers in Japan ignore historical facts, and attempt
to deny the massacre. Their action has severely damaged the healthy and
stable development of the China-Japan relationship,” Xu said.
The Nanjing Massacre Memorial is an important facility to review the
past and lament the dead. It has been enlarged and reopened today in
order to reveal the atrocities of Japanese aggressors, to remind the
Chinese nation to fight against the Japanese rightists’ attempts to
distort history and whitewash war crimes, he pointed out. By recalling
the past, the memorial also conveys Chinese people’s wishes for peace
with all nations in the world, the official noted.
The new memorial, built at a cost of 3 million yuan (405,000 U.S.
dollars),is about three times larger than the old one with 111 mu (7.4
hectares) in floor space and 9,000 sq m exhibition area. The exhibits on
display include 3,500 photographs, audio-video materials, documentary
pieces featuring three themes: the Nanjing Massacre, the Victory in the
Anti-Japanese War and the remains of massacre victims, according to
curator Zhu Chengshan.
The newly-added exhibits also include archives (names, portraits and
brief introductions) of 10,000 victims in the massacre. The hall had
been closed for renovation since June 2006 after a decision was made to
expand the hall as the number of stored articles increased to more than
10,000.
“With the name of ‘peace ship’, the main building of the memorial hall
will play a role as a peace promoter while providing visitors with the
truth about this past humiliation in Chinese history,” Zhu said. Over
200 monks and Buddhist disciples from China and Japan also rallied and
held a religious ceremony Thursday to lament the massacre victims. In
Xiamen, a port city in east China’s Fujian Province, more than 100
Chinese musicians were preparing a symphony concert with the title of
“History and Future” to mourn massacre victims and call for world peace.
In Beijing, thousands of people from all circles of life flocked into
the Memorial Hall of the Chinese People’s Anti-Japanese War, which
opened to the public on Thursday.—Xinhua |