Inmp Newsletter Article Sept 23
Inmp Newsletter Article Sept 23
Inmp Newsletter Article Sept 23
reminded of the atrocities that took place during the Second SinoJapanese War.
The attendants were organized by the New Jersey Alliance for Learning
and Preserving the History of WWII in Asia (NJ-ALPHA), as part of the 2015
Peace and Reconciliation Asia Study Tour. The 17 tour participants
included 13 Americans and 4 Canadians, most of whom are educators at
the middle or high school and college levels.
The tours objective was to give educators the opportunity to explore
historical events that have been neglected or misunderstood, to identify
how the past can help us rectify present-day injustices, and to prevent
tragic atrocities from being repeated in the future. It focused specifically
on the history of WWII in Asia, especially concerning comfort women, the
Nanking Massacre, biological/chemical warfare, and slave labor issues.
The group visited 4 cities in China (Shanghai, Nanjing, Harbin, Beijing)
and Seoul in Korea from July 9th through 23rd, 2015. The schedule included
organizing lectures and seminars of the history of Sino-Japanese
relations, visiting museums and historical sites, meeting survivors of
wartime atrocities, and participating in briefings and reflection sessions.
During the Nanking Massacre, John Rabe provided shelter for Shuqin Xia,
who was one of the over 600 Chinese refugees he protected in his house
at that time. He also mentioned Xias name in The Diaries of John Rabe.
In the first-ever National Memorial Day for the Nanjing Massacre on
December 13th, 2014, Chinese President Jinping Xi, along with Xia Shuqin,
and a school child, unveiled a memorial ding, a type of ancient Chinese
cauldron symbolizing state power and prosperity, during the ceremony.
"We should remember how much pain the Japanese aggressors brought
upon us, and we should thus oppose any war and cherish any peace,"
said Shuqin Xia.
For further details, please contact Mr. Shanyou Yang (email:
[email protected]), Director of the John Rabe and International Safety
Zone Memorial Hall.
Pictures to be attached
Shuqin Xia (in the middle) is telling the horror of Nanjing to participants