Nanjing Massacre

Daqing Yang
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Also known as the “Rape of Nanjing,” Nanjing Massacre refers to the mass killings of disarmed Chinese soldiers and civilians, as well as other atrocities such as rape and looting, committed by the Japanese troops after they occupied Nanjing in the winter of 1937–1938. It is widely regarded as one of the worst Japanese war crimes in World War II. Shortly after the Imperial Japanese Army entered the Chinese capital of Nanjing (previously written as Nanking) on December 13, 1937, Western newspapers reported horrific conditions in the fallen city including mass execution of Chinese captives. Wartime records, mostly compiled by a few Westerners who stayed in the city and organized a refugee zone, showed widespread Japanese atrocities of rape, random killing, and looting that continued for weeks. After Japan’s defeat in 1945, the Nanjing Massacre became a leading case of Japanese war crime at the military tribunals conducted by the victorious Allies between 1946 and 1948. Citing witness accounts and burial records, these tribunals put the total number of Chinese killed in the Nanjing area variously from 100,000 to over 300,000. In addition, they estimated that there had been around 20,000 cases of rape and that one third of the city had been destroyed by the Japanese troops within six weeks of occupation. Largely overlooked before the early 1970s, the Nanjing Massacre has since become a hotly contested issue in Japan and between Japan and China. In 1985, China opened a large memorial museum in Nanjing, where the number of 300,000 victims is on prominent display. The Chinese government has designated December 13 a day of national commemoration. Documents related to the Nanjing Massacre submitted by China have become part of the UNESCO Memory of the World registry. In recent decades, many important first-hand evidence has emerged and makes it both possible and necessary to reassess this historical event. Wartime Japanese military and personal records confirm that at least several tens of thousands of Chinese had been killed in mass executions that were condoned, if not ordered, by the high command of the Japanese army in China. Moreover, killing disarmed Chinese captives and atrocities against Chinese civilians had already begun well before Japanese troops reached Nanjing; many such atrocities continued long afterward, thus suggesting there was more than a temporary breakdown of Japanese army discipline in Nanjing. Western and Chinese accounts add vivid details of sexual violence, indiscriminate killings, and looting by Japanese soldiers. They also reveal grave errors on the part of the Chinese defense that likely made the situation worse. Despite these points of convergence among historians, however, there is still disagreement over the exact number of victims and causes of the Japanese atrocities in Nanjing.
南京大屠杀
南京大屠杀也被称为“南京大屠杀”,指的是日本军队在1937年至1938年冬季占领南京后,对被解除武装的中国士兵和平民进行的大规模杀戮,以及强奸和抢劫等其他暴行。这被广泛认为是日本在二战中犯下的最严重的战争罪行之一。1937年12月13日,日本帝国军队进入中国首都南京(以前写为南京)后不久,西方报纸报道了这座沦陷城市的可怕情况,包括大规模处决中国俘虏。战时记录主要是由几个留在城里的西方人编纂的,他们组织了一个难民区,记录显示日本人强奸、随意杀戮和抢劫的暴行持续了数周。1945年日本战败后,在1946年至1948年期间,获胜的盟军在军事法庭上对日本犯下的战争罪行进行了审判,南京大屠杀成为了主要案件。这些法庭引用证人的证词和埋葬记录,将南京地区被杀的中国人总数从10万到30多万不等。此外,他们估计约有20 000起强奸案,三分之一的城市在占领后六周内被日本军队摧毁。在20世纪70年代初之前,南京大屠杀基本上被忽视了,自那以后,南京大屠杀在日本国内以及日中之间成为一个备受争议的问题。1985年,中国在南京开设了一个大型纪念馆,突出展示了30万遇难者的人数。中国政府将12月13日定为全国纪念日。中国提交的南京大屠杀相关文件已被列入联合国教科文组织世界记忆名录。近几十年来,出现了许多重要的第一手证据,使重新评估这一历史事件成为可能和必要。战时日本的军事和个人记录证实,至少有数万名中国人在大规模处决中被杀害,这些处决即使没有得到在华日军最高指挥官的命令,也是被宽恕的。此外,在日军到达南京之前,杀害被解除武装的中国俘虏和对中国平民的暴行早已开始;许多这样的暴行持续了很长时间,这表明南京的日军纪律不仅仅是暂时的崩溃。西方和中国的记述中都添加了日本士兵性暴力、滥杀无辜和抢劫的生动细节。它们还揭示了中国国防方面的严重错误,这可能使情况变得更糟。然而,尽管历史学家之间有这些共同点,但对于受害者的确切人数和日本在南京犯下暴行的原因,仍然存在分歧。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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