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Manuscripts of "The Fall of Zhenjiang",
by Zhang Yibo (1884-1964), will be put under the hammer in the capital by
auction house Beijing Council International Auction Co Ltd, on Dec. 1.
(Photo: China Daily)
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BEIJING, Nov. 21 -- Five
days before they carried out the Rape of Nanking in December 1937, Japanese
invaders captured the neighboring city of Zhenjiang.
The attackers of the then provincial capital of
Jiangsu failed to notice one of the city's resident's recording, right under
their noses, the atrocities they inflicted on civilians every day for more than
two months.
What the Japanese did then is finally coming to
light.
Manuscripts of "The Fall of Zhenjiang", by Zhang Yibo
(1884-1964), will be put under the hammer in the capital by auction house
Beijing Council International Auction Co Ltd, on Dec. 1.
The Hong Kong owner of the manuscripts has set a
reserve price of just 20,000 yuan (15,400 U.S. dollars) - the amount he paid for
them - in the hope a public library or museum will acquire the piece of history.
"The owner contacted a few public institutions
several years ago but came up against red tape," Dong Guoqiang, president of the
auction house, said.
"The manuscripts are so important they should be
owned by people who will carry out research on them and make full use of their
historical value."
The author of the manuscripts, Zhang, joined the
Revolution of 1911 which toppled the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).
He returned to his hometown of Zhenjiang afterwards
and built a textile factory there.
When the Japanese invaders captured Zhenjiang on Dec.
8, 1937, he chose to stay with his factory, but was forced to flee with family
members more than two months later, never to return.
Zhang spent his final months in the city documenting
the barbaric acts he saw being committed by the Japanese.
The manuscripts contain 124,000 characters in nine
chapters. The work covers the political and economic scene of the city before
its fall, and the day the Japanese arrived.
Zhang also wrote about how Zhenjiang residents became
forced labor for the Japanese, as well as his own thoughts on the war and what
he heard about his city after he left.
Included in the work are the diaries of Dejun, a monk
at the Dinghui Temple in the Jiaoshan Hill in Zhenjiang, and an American
expatriate's article on the Nanjing Massacre, which was written in 1938.
(Source: China Daily)
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