The fact remains that, by polls conducted, Japanese youth overwhelmingly hold animosity towards Chinese while the Chinese youth less so.
I've no respect for such nations or peoples.
That is because they didn't taught the proper history in school. Yes they mention about Nanjing massacre but briefly I doubt they have discussion about the subject. I went to german speaking highschool and we have thorough discussion on the German atrocities. Plenty of literature or play about the evil of German occupation and atrocities.
They have common history book between German and French written by author from both countries
The japanese commercial media specially private TV station are bad they didn't show the proper history of WW II instead they tend to mock and denigrate China or Chinese.
They are book about atrocities but it does not have wide appeal and only restricted to Academia
That is why I said they white wash the history.
There is effort to have common history text book written by author from China, Korea and Japan but they don't have wide following since the school district decide the textbook use in School.
But these days there are plenty of Japanese students study and latter work in China and they know the real history.
Anyway I finish watching the docu about OC volunteer and I am moved by their service,sense of duty and patriotism At the end of the series it feature all those men now become old men ONe of them come back to Malaysia and found out all of his relative except his sister killed by Japanese because of his involvement . But none of them express regret and they all said they do it again. Here is the episode
I am specially moved by the story of Kho Haisheng His picture below he is from Serawak barely 19 years old when he volunteer , Eating bad food and lack of sleep he drive nonstop to deliver munition from Lashio to the battle front. sleeping in the truck and get bombed by the Japanese. At the end of the war he decide to stay in China His unit was transferred to North China where he met a girl Hu wemin and fall in love They planned to settle down and buy farm in Andong But unfortunely civil war broke his unit was trapped by the communist and he attemp to flee but got shot in the hand. Next thing he know he wake in hospital and his girl travel all night to see him and nurse after him for 6 months.
But now that he is invalid He wonder if he can't make in China and become burden to his girls He decide to go back to Serawak without telling her and start a new life. He married Iban girl and have 8 children become a succesfull grower But he felt guilty and remorse So he trace and try to find his girlfriend for 6 years Eventually he found her but become widow with 2 children . They resume the tie and correspondence for 20 years On her last letter she send him her picture and said "you should not feel guilty now that I am old I can undertstand what you did no regret and no remorse and we should cherish the friendship and keep healthy. ONe year latter she died
Tribute to the Nanyang volunteers
The Memorial to the Nanyang Volunteer Mechanics and Drivers was unveiled by the then three surviving Sarawak Volunteer Mechanics on August 20, 2016. — Photos by Lim Yu Seng
THIS year 2019 marks the 80th anniversary of the epic event of the Nanyang Volunteer Drivers and Mechanics who served in the Resistance War in China in 1939.
Last year (2018) the UNESCO’s Memory of the World Register — Asia and Pacific Regions — had endorsed the contributions of this special group of people during World War Two. Who are the Nanyang Volunteer Drivers and Mechanics?
The term Nanyang, literally translated as Southern Ocean, refers to Southeast Asia today.
Before the Second World War, the region, with the exception of Thailand (formerly Siam), was controlled by western colonial powers.
The Memorial Monument to the Nanyang Jigong at Wanding, Yunnan. — Photo supplied by Tang Xiaomei
Indonesia was ruled by the Dutch and known as Dutch East Indies. The British controlled Burma, Malaya, Singapore, Sarawak, Sabah and Brunei.Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam were ruled by the French as Indo-China and the Phillipines was an American colony.
As hard-working migrants, many Chinese arrived in Nanyang over the years and during the colonial period. These millions of far-flung individuals all considered China as their homeland and cultural base.
Generally, the term Nanyang Chinese is always considered as a reference to members of a disparate group in relation to each other, as well as in relation to mainland China.
Nanyang gave the overseas Chinese a collective regional identity, providing the basis for the founding of the Federation of Nanyang China Relief Fund Committees in 1938. When drivers and mechanics from Nanyang volunteered to serve in China during the Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945), they were known as Nanyang Volunteer Mechanics or NanqiaoJigong.
From 1928 to 1937, Japan initiated a series of “incidents” as a pretext for military action in Northern and Northeastern China. On July 7, 1937 the Japanese claimed one of their soldiers was missing and demanded to search Wanping (a Ming Dynasty Fortress in Beijing) for him. The Chinese refused, thus creating a pretext for the Japanese to initiate the invasion of Beijing.
July 7 Incident
This event became known as the July 7 Incident or the Marco Polo Bridge Incident, which marked the beginning of a full-scale war between China and Japan. The Japanese had estimated they could win the war in three months but it lasted for eight years, until Japan officially surrendered on Sept 9, 1945.
The Memorial Monument dedicated to the Nanyang Volunteer Mechanics and Drivers at Xishan Forest Reserve of Kunming, Yunnan. (Photo by Lim Yu Seng 2013).
About a month after the July 7 Incident, the Chinese Chamber of Commerce in Singapore published a notice in the Chinese press, calling for a conference to be convened on August 15, 1937.
At this meeting the Malaya/Singapore Overseas Chinese Relief Fund Committee was formed and Mr Tan Kah Kee (Chen Jiageng) was elected chairman. Simultaneously, the overseas Chinese in other Southeast Asian countries set up their China Relief Fund Committees as well.
About 180 representatives from the Philippines, French Indochina, Thailand, Indonesia, Hongkong, Malaya, Sarawak, Sabah, and Burma attended the Overseas Chinese Conference on Oct 10, 1938 at the Nanyang Secondary School in Singapore. Together, they represented more than eight million ethnic Chinese living in the American, French, Dutch, British colonies in Nanyang and Thailand.
By the end of the meeting, the Nanyang Federation of the China Relief Fund was formed as the regional coordinating body. Mr Tan Kah Kee was elected chairman, and the regional headquarters was located in the Ee Hoe Hean Club in Singapore.
The representatives from Sarawak were Wee Kheng Chiang, Hwang Yew Khiam and Tu Nai Bing from Kuching; Zhuan You Cheng and Yang Yi Ying from Miri; Chen Zhong Chi and Lau Kah Too from Sibu.
Through various fund-raising initiatives to support the war, the China Relief Fund facilitated the transfer of significant financial resources to the Chinese Nationalist government. The funds played a crucial role in supporting China in every aspect of the war and were used to purchase medication, medical equipment, clothing, food, and military hardware such as planes, tanks, trucks, explosives, weapons and other military material.