The Forgotten Holocaust of World War II
Ratings55
Average rating4.3
* Any comments regarding politics will be dealt with. Flagged, blocked, accompanied by one of my endlessly innovative insults. Take your political opinions elsewhere, the few of you who think this is bloody Facebook. I'm not interested.
”Almost all people have this potential for evil, which would be unleashed only under certain dangerous social circumstances.”
A beloved European friend, who's currently living in Changzhou, has been pestering me to read this book for months. I was unwilling. Of course, History is my greatest love and I was extremely familiar with the tragedy of Nanjing the capital of China at the time- through documentaries and films. This is exactly why I hadn't read Iris Chang's book. I couldn't bear to visualize the scenes of destruction and utter brutality in my mind. Even the Wikipedia page narrating the slaughters is a place of horror. However, I thought that maybe the time had finally come and I ventured...
What kind of review can I possibly write now? There are times that I feel my words lose all meaning...The book chronicles the atrocities committed by the Japanese invaders after the fall of the city on 13/12/1937. The estimated victims? 300,000 people over a period of six weeks....The writing is detailed, powerful, razor-sharp. The horror comes through the pages not because the writer intended to shock but because the events described have no need for embellishment or sensationalist language. The violence, the ordeal, the brutality of the attacks, the behaviour of the monsters, the paranoia. Women and children, innocent civilians, meeting a fate and an end that no one is able to imagine. I feel that each sentence I am writing falls short, remains meaningless, devoid of any substance. It is impossible to enclose and communicate the feelings caused in me while I was reading Chang's book. The anger, the hatred, the despair...It's like a journey to a Hell that no religion has ever conceived, a pit of blood and madness that leaves you hopeless, empty, frozen....
And in the end? And now? So many eulogies, so many times mankind has uttered ”never again”. And the result? Nothing. Purely nothing. We loudly and wildly proclaim ”never another Holocaust, another Somme, another Vietnam, another Nanjing...”' Empty words and evil deeds are the banes of History. I often feel the human race has learnt nothing from its darkest moments. We live through endless repetitions of horrors (in various degrees and forms), watching today's ”elected” dictators giving speeches, ruling lives....I don't care about political or religious issues, I don't care about political correctness. This isn't about power or international relationships. This is about the sheer brutality that lives in every human being, waiting for a chance to come forth and attack and the natural tendencies exploited by those in power all over the world, throughout the course of History. How can one stop this? The answer is yet to be found....
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One of my easiest read. The book is easy to read and goes straight to the point on all explanation. That said, this is a gruesome book about the atrocities committed by the Japanese army when it sacked the Chinese city of Nanking.
My previous reading on the 2nd SS panzer division killing of civilians ranked number on the atrocities list. The Japanese soldiers out did the SS. Children were boiled alive, women raped then bamboo ramped into their vagina.
The worst of the atrocities was using prisoners of war for bayonet practice. Two soldiers competed in who will kill 100 people fastest with their bayonets.
Absolutely chilling and haunting. At points I felt physically ill reading about the atrocities, not because it was gratuitous, but because it happened at all.
I felt compelled to finish to the end, and to do my on research into how the response of the Rape has changed in the past 20 years.
It's very rare for me to devour a book. But this book really just amazed me.
This book was an eye opener. I knew about the rape of Nanking but I had no idea how bad it truly was. I had no idea how the Japanese government likes to pretend it wasn't that serious. The stories from Chinese survivors and those who were trying to save them were just jaw dropping.
One of the more disturbing books I have ever read. It is hard to escape life without hearing about the atrocities of the Holocaust or Dresden or the bombs the US dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but as a history degree wielding woman about to start a master's, I had heard precious little about the Rape of Nanking until deciding to read this book. What I read shocked me–it was much like the grittiest of horror films, except I had the knowledge that all of this actually happened. Chang also did a great job explaining the multitude of reasons we DON'T hear about the Rape of Nanking. Easily one of the harshest things I've ever read, and I will be doing more research on my own.
Chang scores a horrifying depiction of the atrocities committed upon the people of Nanking by the Japanese in your gray matter. Many of the facts in this book are still left out of Japanese teachings. It's an incredibly sad tale, but it shows that people from all walks of life can unite under one roof when complete inhumanity runs rampant.