Special: 59th Berlin International Film Festival
BEIJING, Feb. 9 - Florian Gallenberger hopes his film
"John Rabe" could spark debate and make Japan face with its past.
The film is based on the true story of the courage of
an unsung German engineer who helped save 200,000 Chinese from Japanese troops
during the 1937 Nanjing Massacre.
"We're fully aware the film could be explosive in
Japan," said Gallenberger, whose native Germany has also faced sometimes
turbulent reflection on its Nazi past in the wake of films on the Holocaust and
Hitler decades later.
"It's an extremely controversial subject in Japan and
there are fears there could be severe repercussions. I hope the film won't be
silenced in Japan. I'd very much hope this film could help get an opening-up of
discussion going in Japan."
Rabe was an electrical equipment executive in
Nanjing, then the national capital of China.
The six-week wave of killing by Japanese soldiers
after Nanjing fell was among the bloodiest episodes of Japan's invasion of
China. Chinese accounts say 300,000 were killed.
But some conservative Japanese politicians and
scholars deny a massacre took place. It remains a heated political issue in
Japan. An allied tribunal put the death toll at about 142,000.
For China, how Japan remembers the "Rape of Nanking"
- as the city was then called in English - has become a test of how contrite its
neighbor is about its occupation of much of the country from the 1930s up to
1945.
In 1937, Rabe was head of the International Committee
for the Nanking Safety Zone and helped save Chinese lives by setting up the
7-sq-km zone where about 200,000 people were sheltered.
Rabe had worked in China for Siemens for 30 years and
was about to return to the headquarters in Berlin when the invasion began. As
Germany and Japan were allies, Rabe used his Nazi party membership and did all
he could to protect the civilians.
Rabe was arrested by the Gestapo upon his return to
Berlin in 1938 for collaborating with the Chinese. After World War II, the
Allies at first refused to de-Nazify him. He died in Berlin in 1950 in poverty
and forgotten but remained a hero in China.
"I have to admit to my great shame that before
starting this project I didn't know anything about John Rabe either,"
Gallenberger said after his film's well-received world premiere at the Berlin
film festival.
The German-Chinese co-production, in English and
German, features Ulrich Tukur ("The Lives of Others") in the title role and
American actor Steve Buscemi as a US doctor in the city.
Gallenberger, whose film cost about 18 million euros
(23.3 million) to make, said there have been other films made about Rabe in
China. But because Rabe's story was misused for propaganda purposes, the world
never really took notice before.
Now, Gallenberger said, the world is ripe for the
story of the man sometimes called "the Oskar Schindler of China", a reference to
the industrialist credited with saving 1,200 Jews during the Holocaust.
"It's taken more than 70 years for John Rabe to get
the recognition he deserves," he said. "It was our duty to take a neutral view,
not a Japanese nor a Chinese viewpoint, and I believe we've accomplished that."
(Source: chinadaily.com.cn/Agencies)
