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Headquarters of the International Committee for the Nanking
Safety Zone. John Magee is second from the right and John Rabe is in the center.

A drainage pond outside of Nanjing, filled with the bodies of
Chinese murdered by the Japanese soldiers.
"American Missionary Eyewitnesses to the Nanjing Massacre," the current Yale
Divinity Library exhibit, includes documentation from the papers of nine
American missionaries who remained in Nanjing throughout the Massacre. By some
estimates, the Japanese army killed more than 300,000 Chinese and raped nearly
80,000 women in the city of Nanjing between December 13, 1937 and the end of
March, 1938. The missionaries' letters, diaries, reports, and photographs
provide graphic evidence of a horrific frenzy of beheading, bayoneting, burying
alive, burning, gang-raping, and other atrocities. This evidence is of
particular interest because the Japanese government has refused to officially
recognize that these atrocities took place, nor does any mention of the Nanjing
Massacre appear in Japanese school textbooks.
When Nanjing fell to the
Japanese, there were twenty-seven Westerners remaining in the city; of these
fifteen were Americans, primarily missionaries from the Episcopal, Disciples of
Christ, Presbyterian, and Methodist churches. The missionaries worked together
with others, including the German businessman John Rabe, to establish the
International Committee for the Nanking Safety Zone shortly before the capture
of Nanjing by the Japanese. Once the Massacre set in, the Safety Zone became the
only place that offered some resemblance of sanctuary; more than 200,000 people
crowded into the Zone, an area about one-eighth of the city. The missionaries,
Rabe, and a few other Westerners risked their lives daily in order to protect
thousands of Chinese from being murdered and thousands of women from being raped
by the Japanese army.
The Divinity Library recently received a photocopy of the extensive diary of
John Rabe. This diary came to light only a few months ago when Rabe's
granddaughter was tracked down by a researcher who had come across Rabe's name
in the missionary accounts held at the Divinity Library. Rabe's diary is of
particular interest because he was a German and a member of the Nazi Party.
Germany was strengthening its alliance with Japan during this time period and it
was of no possible personal gain to Rabe for him to expose the Japanese
atrocities. When he went back to Germany in February 1938 and tried to bring the
Japanese activities to the attention of the German government, his efforts were
rebuffed and his career suffered significantly. Since certain Japanese officials
have sought to characterize American accounts of the Nanjing massacre as
fabrications designed to discredit the Japanese, it is of note that a German
ally's accounts clearly corroborate those of the Americans.
The Divinity Library exhibit on the Nanjing Massacre will be up through
January 31. On Friday, January 31, at 4:00 p.m. Professor Beatrice Bartlett of
Yale's History department will present a lecture on the Nanjing Massacre in
Marquand Chapel. A reception in the Library's Day Missions Reading Room will
follow. |