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The Rape of Nanking
The Rape of Nanking: The Forgotten Holocaust of World War II | Iris Chang
Relates an account of the 1937 massacre of 250,000 Chinese civilians in Nanking by the invading Japanese military, a carnage for which the Japanese government has never admitted responsibility.
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BC_Dittemore
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Pickpick

It‘s baffling what people do to inflict pain on other people. I don‘t understand it, yet I know how capable I am of doing it. Even in small ways like how I might talk to someone who upsets me.

Of course, the Rape of Nanking was a massacre not a mild social interaction. Iris Chang describes a lot of atrocities. At first they turned my stomach (literally) but she never stops describing them. Is it intentional?

I‘m still left with WHY.

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LibraryCin
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Mehso-so

I knew nothing about this beyond having heard of it. The lead-up to the main part of the story didn‘t catch my interest. The things that happened were incredibly awful, but the author also followed up with chapters on Westerners who tried to help with a “safe zone” in the middle of the city, then chapters on how the Chinese people fared after and how the Japanese tried to hide what had happened.

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southportberkshire@gmail.com

😡

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KateReadsYA
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So my husband asked me if I wanted to read a book together and I could not believe my ears 🥹 I guess me talking about books 24/7 has sparked something in him! I tried to get him to annotate and have discussions and he said don't push it lmao. Baby steps baby steps haha! We are reading the only non fiction book I have on my shelf and he is very interested since he loves history. It's tagged and we will be starting it in a few weeks.

Ruthiella Excellent! Hope this leads to more spousal joint reading! 👍 2y
peanutnine That's awesome! I'm still trying to convince my partner to do a buddy read with me. Hope you have fun! ☺️ 2y
55 likes2 comments
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sprainedbrain
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Pickpick

It‘s hard to read about war atrocities, and even more difficult to look at images like those in this book, but it‘s important to know. In 1937, over a period of 6 weeks, Imperial Japanese forces systematically tortured and murdered hundreds of thousands of Chinese soldiers and civilian men, women, and children. Anywhere from 20,000 to 80,000 people were brutally raped. Horrifying subject matter; well-researched and written book.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

KatieDid927 I had never even heard about this until my younger brother did a report on it in high school. 😞 4y
sprainedbrain @KatieDid927 I‘m glad he learned about it in high school! I didn‘t, in high school or college. 4y
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LoveToReadLiveToRead I don‘t think we did anything about this in school, focusing on the impact of WW2 on Europe (I‘m in the UK). I learnt more about this and other aspects of the war in the Pacific whilst reading Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand. 4y
sprainedbrain @LoveToReadLiveToRead that‘s also a great book! (edited) 4y
KatieDid927 @sprainedbrain Same all around. My WWII education focused solely on the Holocaust and European Theater. To the point that looking back, it was over-saturated with it. There were so many things I never learned because of it. Not saying it shouldn‘t be taught, it should! But the way my education panned out I spent literal years learning about one atrocity and never learning about others. (edited) 4y
sprainedbrain @KatieDid927 my situation exactly! 4y
KatieDid927 @sprainedbrain I learned about South African apartheid my senior year and was basically like, what else haven‘t I learned?! Between that and the whitewashing of our history in general, I‘ve been doing a lot of self-educating through reading. 4y
sprainedbrain @KatieDid927 I was just thinking of that tonight... I think that we, as people that read on purpose as adults, are not the majority. I‘m discouraged all the time by how much I don‘t know and how there‘s only so much time for reading in the day... but there are people that don‘t read or otherwise educate themselves at all after their formal education ends. It‘s disheartening. 4y
Butterfinger Do you think that it is where there is so much to teach that teachers assign different topics to different groups to research? It was just a thought that popped in my head. Although, teachers would have made sure the projects were presented to the whole group. I DO know that there needs to be more social studies taught in the elementary years. It is horribly neglected. This has been my battle cry for years. #TeachEmpathyThroughHistory 4y
sprainedbrain @Butterfinger I‘m certain that there is too much to teach! I don‘t know what the answer is, and I‘m sure there are more things taught now that weren‘t when I was in school. I agree completely with your battlecry! 4y
Cinfhen Absolutely devastating piece of history few are aware of. I only know because my husband is a history buff and told me about it. Of course, I had to go down the Google rabbit hole. Wonderful choice and bravo for highlighting a part of history we need to learn from. 4y
Crazeedi I knew about this but have never read a book on subject, adding 4y
Dogearedcopy My father, a Filipino, *once* told me the stories of the Imperial Japanese as they raided his village. I didn‘t quite believe all that he said until I read this book and realized that he had understated the nightmare. (edited) 4y
sprainedbrain @Dogearedcopy I can‘t even imagine how horrible that was. 4y
84 likes5 stack adds16 comments
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Lizpixie
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Only 2 pieces of #BookMail today. First up is this non fiction book about one of the worst massacres of WWII. When the Japanese army rolled into the Chinese city of Nanking in 1937, more than 300,000 men, women & children were raped, tortured then killed in a month. By the time they finally left they had ruined so many lives & the Chinese government just wanted to forget it happened. I heard The Poppy War was based on this & wanted to learn more.

DGRachel I didn‘t know The Poppy War was based on this. Thanks! 6y
CraftELibrarian Heartbreaking history. War is heartbreaking. This made me so emotional and I had to read it for one of my RA classes in college. It's the type of history we don't really hear/learn about yet affected so many through its ripples. From reading this I had a better understanding of what was happening in and around WWII. I felt the author was more neutral and matter-of-fact in telling what happened. It affects me still even just seeing the cover. 6y
CraftELibrarian The audiobook helped me get through most of it. The book also has photographs that were retrieved from the war. Devastating 6y
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Lizpixie @DGRachel no problem! @CraftELibrarian I flipped through the photos when it came, they‘re just horrific. I knew about what the Japanese did in Burma because my husbands grandfather was a Chindits during WWII(black ops British troops that waged guerilla war behind the enemy lines there) but I‘d never heard of this massacre at all. More people need to know about this so it never happens again. 6y
CraftELibrarian It's certainly horrific and I can't begin to imagine how it was to be there first hand. My grandfather was in D-Day and refused to talk about it from what I heard. Before this book I was also unaware of this part of WWII. I do think the book did a good job covering how it got to the tragedy that it became. 6y
58 likes6 comments
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TheWellAccompaniedBook
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A book I definitely have to read. I‘m currently in Nanjing and took my students to visit the massacre memorial museum the week before last. It‘s harrowing, with it‘s partly excavates grave of 10,000 bodies, and I am moved every time I go there. It‘s also an excellent example of a museum experience.

kspenmoll A few years ago I met a group of people from this area who were giving out pamphlets, books on this at the WWII monument in DC.They were afraid the U.S. citizens were unaware of this horror.Spent a long time speaking with them. They gave me materials in both languages for the World History teacher at my HS. 7y
TheWellAccompaniedBook @kspenmoll I imagine it was a rather full on conversation for you! So many of the photographs in the museum are just horrific (not to mention the pit), and to learn that the soldiers had competitions to see how many people they could kill is heartbreaking. The Japanese have still not apologised and this causes much angst here of course. 7y
47 likes3 stack adds2 comments
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erzascarletbookgasm
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Many are familiar with the dark chapter of history of Hitler‘s army, claiming lives of millions of people, including six million Jews. But few are aware of what happened to millions of people in China from 1937 to 1945. In this book, it finally reveals the #forgotten and perhaps the most gruesome horrors of WW2 - the atrocities and barbarity committed by the Japanese Imperial Army on innocent Chinese civilians. 💔💔💔
#newyearreads #forgotten

Wilkie This was a harrowing read! 7y
LoveToReadLiveToRead We didn‘t touch on this at all in school and I only became aware of it when reading Unbroken. I bet that is a difficult read. (edited) 7y
julesG Mo Hayder based the back story of her gruesome thriller Tokyo/The Devil of Nanking on what happened back then. 7y
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Dulcinella @julesG I thought Mo Hayders book was excellent. But what an horrible event it must have been:-( 7y
julesG @Dulcinella I hope humankind has learned from the mistakes and horrors of the past. 7y
Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks 💔💔💔 7y
MiyakoBunny I just got a graphic novel for the #LetsGetGraphicWeekLongMarathon that touches on this 7y
DivineDiana I am one of the unaware. 😓 7y
Izai.Amorim The worst thing is, while Germany took responsibility for its past, paid reparations, and never let anyone forget that they did it (school curriculum), the Japanese deny everything they‘ve done. No regrets, no repentance. Really sick. 7y
90 likes6 stack adds9 comments
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Adventures_of_a_French_Reader
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Here is my #fictionnonfictionpairing
I have read Nanjing, the burning city, but not yet The Rape of Nanking...
#seasonsreadings2016

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Alisnazzy
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This history of the occupation of Japanese forces in Nanking, China #mademecry a lot. It was a tough read, made all the worse because it was an historical account of a real event. This made a George RR Martin book look like a fairy tale. But it was an important read because it was certainly not a subject that was even mentioned in passing in US schools. #somethingforsept

Gulfsidemusing I remember hearing the author interviewed years ago. Have been curious about this book ever since... 8y
RealLifeReading And it was also really sad to read about Chang's depression and suicide 8y
Laura317 I will have to add it to my books on China collection. Sounds like a difficult book to read. 8y
kammartinez I read this while doing research on comfort women for a paper while I was at uni. I rarely ever get nightmares, but this book haunted me - especially the horrific photographs. That was a rather bad week. 8y
70 likes3 stack adds4 comments