NANJING, Aug. 15 (Xinhua) -- An antiwar cartoon
exhibition displaying works by 110 Japanese artists opened in the eastern
Chinese city of Nanjing Saturday to mark the 64th anniversary of Japan's
surrender in World War II.
The exhibition, jointly organized by the Memorial
Hall of the Victims of the Nanjing Massacre and the Japanese non-governmental
association of "My Aug. 15," will last three moths.
About 160 cartoon works will be displayed, the first
time the exhibition is held outside Japan, the organizers said.
Most of the authors of the cartoons were born before
Aug. 15, 1945 and had deep memories about the war. In addition, many of them
lived in different parts of China with their parents at that time and learned of
the news of Japan's surrender in China. Many years later, they produced a group
of works with the theme of "My Aug. 15," conveying their condemnation about the
war atrocities and reflection on the militaristic brutality.
The exhibition was divided into four parts according
to the authors' ages when Japan surrendered, "above 16," "8-15," "5-7" and
"below four."
Nine prestigious Japanese cartoonists, along with
about 100 people from several Japanese NGOs, attended the opening ceremony of
the exhibition Saturday.
"It tells a true story," said 70-year-old artist
Kenji Morita, pointing to his own work "Thanks to Adoptive Chinese Parents."
"Although Japan was an invader, many Chinese parents
still helped raise Japanese children orphaned by the war," he said.
Leading Japanese manga artist Tetsuya Chiba also
recalled the war past he experienced in China.
"I was in Shenyang (capital of northeast China's
Liaoning Province) the day when Japan's surrender in World War II was announced
by the late Emperor Hirohito over radio. I was only six then, and I couldn't
really understand what happened," Chiba told Xinhua.
"I didn't manage to return to Japan immediately, so I
spent a very hard year in China after Japan's surrender. But I met a very nice
Chinese couple, they gave me food even when they didn't have enough to eat. When
we separated, they gave me a blanket. I kept the blanket for years until I met
their offspring," he said.
"Aug. 15 is a meaningful day for both China and
Japan, whether to mark the victory or to introspect the war. The day reminds us
to be against wars," he added.