Forged Photos of the “Nankin Massacre”
source document:http://www2.biglobe.ne.jp/~remnant/nankingm.htm
The Nanjing Massacre was fabricated by American missionaries and the Chinese Nationalist Party, but the US, which bombed the Japanese mainland, took the initiative to spread the fabricated Nanjing Massacre to the world in order to cover up US war crimes. After the normalisation of diplomatic relations between Japan and China, the CCP forced Japanese politicians to negotiate with Japan to have a ‘correct historical understanding’ by imposing China's fabricated history on Japan, and Japanese bureaucrats have been led to believe that what China says is the truth. More recently, the CCP has adopted a political approach of demonising Japan and escalating anti-Japanese education, triggering and exploding public discontent with Japan.
Iris Chang’s book, The Rape of Nanking, dated this photo as having been taken just after the Nanking Massacre. However, the alleged Japanese soldier standing by wears a military uniform with a turned-down collar with class badges on it. This style was not introduced until after the uniform revision on June 1, 1938. In addition, the photo does not tell how the pictured dead were killed, by massacre or in battle, and there were many Chinese soldiers in ordinary clothes.
This photo was used by Iris Chang in her book "The Rape of Nanking" to claim that the Japanese set Nanking on fire. However, this military vehicle was not equipped with a flamethrower, and above all, it was not yet in production during the Nanjing Massacre.
The caption of the 10 November 1937 issue of the Asahi Graph read: ‘Women and children returning to the sun village from field work, protected by our soldiers’.
More information can be found on the links page.👇
The same photograph was also misused by the Asahi Shimbun journalist, Honda Katsuichi, who admitted to misusing it in an article about what he had been taught by the Chinese, based on an anti-Japanese propaganda photo book, Nikko Gyokou Jitsuroku (Actual Record of Violations Against Japanese Enemies), which Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalist Party forces had scattered all over the world in July 1938.
Iris Chan's The Rape of Nanjing contains shocking photographs.
In the fall of 1937, the Associated Press (AP) distributed this photo as a Japanese soldier using a Chinese national as a guinea pig for bayonet practice. Iris Chang’s The Rape of Nanking carries the same kinds of photos of Japanese atrocities. However, the soldier wears a turned-down-collared uniform, which no Japanese soldier wore at that time, so the man is not a Japanese soldier. The January 1939 issue of Lowdown, an American magazine, commented about these photos that this was in fact a communist Chinese officer torturing a Chinese prisoner.
Burial alive is a Chinese culture, not a Japanese one. China buried both the bullet train and the subway even though there were still people alive after the accident. China has a long history of burying people alive, but Japan does not. It is a Chinese myth that the Japanese military did Wanjingkeng.
In Japan, laws have been in force since the Meiji era and public executions have been prohibited since 1905. The presence of onlookers indicates that these executions were not carried out by Japanese soldiers. Also, the people in the photographs are not dressed in winter clothing. The publication of the Actual Record of Violence Against Japan was in July 1938, and the reason why many of the people are wearing spring and summer clothing is thought to be because the photographs were taken at that time. The Chinese Government states that the Nanking Massacre took place between 13 December and the end of January, so in any case these photographs are not of the Nanking Massacre. China was actively carrying out public executions at the time and had been doing so until recently!
The Japanese do not have a culture of playing with corpses.
This is because the Japanese are afraid of grudge spirits.
Description
ALEXISHAFEN, NEW GUINEA. 1944-04-30. LIEUTENANT (JUNIOR GRADE) E. V. MCPHERSON, OF COLUMBUS, OHIO WITH A JAPANESE SKULL WHICH SERVES AS A MASCOT ABOARD THE UNITED STATES NAVY MOTOR TORPEDO BOAT 341.
There are many reports of American soldiers playing with the bodies of Japanese soldiers.
Here is another photo that has been actively posted by people who have seen this book.
If you don't notice anything odd about this picture, you are pretty much brainwashed. The man with the sword is obviously not in Japanese military uniform. And this man apparently does not know how to use a Japanese sword. His feet are positioned differently when using a Japanese sword.
The Chinese are also actively posting about the competition to cut 100 people. They change the publication date from the 13th to the 30th, and they do not mind posting falsified dates, etc. The photo of the two was taken in Changzhou on December 12, 1937, and has nothing to do with Nanjing. The Tokyo Nichinichi Shimbun photographer Zhenju Sato, who photographed both Mukai and Noda, said, “If you listen carefully, Noda is a battalion adjutant, so he is busy giving orders for operations and so on during white combat such as cutting down Chinese soldiers, so he does not have time for that. Mukai is also an infantry artillery platoon leader, so it is obvious that he is unable to measure distances, issue fire orders, and slay a hundred men during battle.
https://note.com/mayagrohn/n/ncbe7af58c46d
After the war, General Matsui, Lieutenant General Hisao Tani, Captain Gunkichi Tanaka, Ensign Toshiaki Mukai, and Ensign Takeshi Noda were held responsible for the Nanking Incident and were falsely accused by the Allies and executed.
Don't you think it is strange that this book, which has the same content as a vinyl book, is in the library?
This is incorrect information, but some people have posted it as a photo of the Tongzhou Incident, but this originally is not a photo, but an imaginary drawing by someone who does not know the woman's body. The caption of this picture is “An old woman who was stabbed to death by the Japanese army and then had a reedy tube inserted into her lower part” at “Taiji-so” north of Xuzhou.
Rabe's diary says, “There are bodies lying around with bamboo shoved up their butts.
I feel nauseous, almost suffocated.” It was written.” Even women over 70 years old were repeatedly assaulted.”
Masaaki Tanaka, former private secretary to General Matsui, said, “In China, there is a custom of ‘shoving bamboo into the local area’ after rape, but there is no such custom in Japan. Japan has no such custom,” he said.
A similar incident occurred during the Guangzhou uprising in China in 1927.
On July 29, 1937, five months before the invasion of Nanjing, Japanese nationals were similarly victimized. At a restaurant called Kyokuken in Tongzhou, seven or eight women, ranging in age from about 17 to 40, were raped, all of them completely naked, their pubic areas exposed, and after being subjected to acts unbearable for a woman, the women whose pubic areas were exposed were shot dead. Four or five of them were stabbed with bayonets in the pubic region.
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