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BEIJING, June 21 (Xinhuanet) -- China will make two statues for Iris Chang, the late former female reporter of the Associated Press, for her exposure of "atrocities committed by Japanese aggressors" in China and the spirit to "dig up the historical truth".
A group of eminent Chinese artists and scholars
discussed the clay model of the work in Beijing on Tuesday.
"We have received the approval from Chang's family
members to make the statues in memory of her tenacity in exposing the atrocities
committed by Japanese aggressors and her spirit to dig up the historical truth,"
said Yang Zhengquan, vice-chairman of the China Foundation for Human Rights
Development, at the discussion session.
Chang, born in a Chinese immigrants' family in
Princeton of NewJersey, used to be a reporter for the AP and the Chicago
Tribune. She published her book The Rape of Nanking -- The Forgotten Holocaust
of World War II in 1997 after two years' research and interviews on the Chinese
mainland, which shocked the world.
The book, written in English, enabled Europeans and
Americans to know the details of the Nanjing Massacre for the first time. Ithas
been published more than 10 times, with nearly 1 million copies having been
printed.
Chang also frequently made speeches in various
regions criticizing Japan government's refusal to repent its aggressive history
and its efforts to cover up the outrageous crimes committed by past Japanese
militarists.
She was also considered a key member in retrieving
Diaries of John Rabe, which provides crucial records of the Nanjing Massacre.
Chang was found dead of suicide in San Francisco at
age 36 on Nov. 9 last year.
Wang Hongzhi, president of the Nanjing Oil Painting
and Sculpture Institute and undertaker of the project, said he wishes to present
the demure beauty of oriental women in the statues.
"The more important thing is to portray her sense of
historicalresponsibility and intrepid fighting spirit," said Wang.
The statues, to be made of white marble or bronze,
will have a height between 1.8 meters and 2 meters.
One of the statues will be placed in the Memorial
Hall of the Victims in the Nanjing Massacre by Japanese Invaders in Nanjing,
Jiangsu province. The other one will be donated to family members of Chang in
the United States. The delivery time is not set yet. Enditem |