The Forgotten Holocaust of World War II
Ratings31
Average rating4.3
China has endured much hardship in its history, as Iris Chang shows in her ably researched The Rape of Nanking, a book that recounts the horrible events in that eastern Chinese city under Japanese occupation in the late 1930s. Nanking, she writes, served as a kind of laboratory in which Japanese soldiers were taught to slaughter unarmed, unresisting civilians, as they would later do throughout Asia. Likening their victims to insects and animals, the Japanese commanders orchestrated a campaign in which several hundred thousand--no one is sure just how many--Chinese soldiers and noncombatants alike were killed. Chang turns up an unlikely hero in German businessman John Rabe, a devoted member of the Nazi party who importuned Adolf Hitler to intervene and stop the slaughter, and who personally saved the lives of countless residents of Nanking. She also suggests that the Japanese government pay reparations and apologize for its army's horrific acts of 60 years ago.
Reviews with the most likes.
A very difficult yet historically and culturally important read.
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.
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.