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China on Monday published an eight-volume name lists of 13,000 victims of the
Nanjing Massacre, in which more than 300,000 Chinese were slaughtered by
Japanese invading troops from December 1937 to January 1938.
The publications contain information including the name, sex, age, occupation
and residential addresses of the victims, which Japanese army unit committed the
crime and how the victims were killed, as well as sources of this
information.
The books are the most complete name lists of the known victims of the
slaughter to date, which include unarmed soldiers and civilians killed inside or
near Nanjing city, the then capital of China.
"The publication of name lists is just a start. We will continue collecting
information about the victims," said Zhang Xianwen,editor-in-chief of the
compilation,
The eight volumes of name lists are important components of the 27-volume
series of historical materials on the Nanjing Massacre, which were concurrently
published in Nanjing, capital of east China's Jiangsu Province on Monday.
In addition to the first 28 volumes that came out in 2005, the 27 new volumes
consist of many first-hand historical documents and records, such as U.S. news
reports, diaries and official circulars of Japanese troops, diplomatic letters
from the British and German governments, lists of casualties and economic
losses, and signatures of over 600 Chinese civilians seeking refuge against the
atrocity committed by the Imperial Japanese Army from December 1937 to January
1938.
Since 2000, more than 70 Chinese historians from universities and government
archive departments have visited Japan, Britain, the United States, Germany and
Taiwan, compiling and translating nearly 30 million words of original materials
in different languages, which led to the production of a total of 55 volumes in
the series.
"It is a combination of Chinese, Japanese and Western raw materials, which is
objective and just and is able to stand the trial of history," said Zhang
Xianwen, at Monday's issuance ceremony in Nanjing.
Many of the materials are published for the first time and have great
historical value. "Everyone who reads the book will surely get a correct
understanding of what happened at that time," said Zhang, also a professor with
Nanjing University.
The volumes were jointly released by the Jiangsu Provincial People's
Publishing House and Fenghuang Publishing & Media Group.
Compilers said they are still working on a lot of materials which may lead to
the publication of another 25 volumes totaling nearly 20 million words.
The release came before the 70th anniversary of the Massacre which falls on
December 13, when a memorial hall for the Massacre will reopen after two years
of expansion works.
Some 3,000 pieces of historical items, including cameras, weapons and diaries
of the Japanese troops and 3,500 photos taken during the period will be on
show.
Japanese aggressors occupied Nanjing on December 13, 1937, and embarked on a
six-week long orgy of destruction, pillage, rape and slaughter. Historical
records show that more than 300,000 Chinese people, including both disarmed
soldiers and innocent civilians, were murdered.
Controversial visits to a shrine in Japan, where war criminals executed for
their part in the Massacre are among those honored, by former Japanese Prime
Minister Junichiro Koizumi, and history textbook distortions by the Japanese
have angered the Chinese people and government in recent
years. |