In
December of 1937, the Japanese Imperial Army marched into
China's capital city of Nanking and proceeded to murder 300,000
out of 600,000 civilians and soldiers in the city. The six
weeks of carnage would become known as the Rape of Nanking
and represented the single worst atrocity during the World
War II era in either the European or Pacific theaters of war.
The
actual military invasion of Nanking was preceded by a tough
battle at Shanghai that began in the summer of 1937. Chinese
forces there put up surprisingly stiff resistance against
the Japanese Army, which had expected an easy victory in China.
The Japanese had even bragged they would conquer all of China
in just three months. The stubborn resistance by the Chinese
troops upset that timetable, with the battle dragging on through
the summer into late fall. This infuriated the Japanese and
whetted their appetite for the revenge that was to follow
at Nanking.
After
finally defeating the Chinese at Shanghai in November, 50,000
Japanese soldiers then marched on toward Nanking. Unlike the
troops at Shanghai, Chinese soldiers at Nanking were poorly
led and loosely organized. Although they greatly outnumbered
the Japanese and had plenty of ammunition, they withered under
the ferocity of the Japanese attack, and then engaged in a
chaotic retreat. After just four days of fighting, Japanese
troops smashed into the city on December 13, 1937, with orders
issued to "kill all captives."
Their
first concern was to eliminate any threat from the 90,000
Chinese soldiers who surrendered. To the Japanese, surrender
was an unthinkable act of cowardice and the ultimate violation
of the rigid code of military honor drilled into them from
childhood onward. Thus they looked upon Chinese POWs with
utter contempt, viewing them as less than human, unworthy
of life.
The
elimination of the Chinese POWs began after they were transported
by trucks to remote locations on the outskirts of Nanking.
As soon as they were assembled, the savagery began, with young
Japanese soldiers encouraged by their superiors to inflict
maximum pain and suffering upon individual POWs as a way of
toughening themselves up for future battles, and also to eradicate
any civilized notions of mercy. Filmed footage and still photographs
taken by the Japanese themselves document the brutality. Smiling
soldiers can be seen conducting bayonet practice on live prisoners,
decapitating them and displaying severed heads as souvenirs,
and proudly standing among mutilated corpses. Some of the
Chinese POWs were simply mowed down by machine-gun fire while
others were tied-up, soaked with gasoline and burned alive.
After the destruction of the POWs, the soldiers turned their
attention to the women of Nanking and an outright animalistic
hunt ensued. Old women over the age of 70 as well as little
girls under the age of 8 were dragged off to be sexually abused.
More than 20,000 females (with some estimates as high as 80,000)
were gang-raped by Japanese soldiers, then stabbed to death
with bayonets or shot so they could never bear witness.
Pregnant
women were not spared. In several instances, they were raped,
then had their bellies slit open and the fetuses torn out.
Sometimes, after storming into a house and encountering a
whole family, the Japanese forced Chinese men to rape their
own daughters, sons to rape their mothers, and brothers their
sisters, while the rest of the family was made to watch.
Throughout
the city of Nanking, random acts of murder occurred as soldiers
frequently fired their rifles into panicked crowds of civilians,
killing indiscriminately. Other soldiers killed shopkeepers,
looted their stores, and then set the buildings on fire after
locking people of all ages inside. They took pleasure in the
extraordinary suffering that ensued as the people desperately
tried to escape the flames by climbing onto rooftops or leaping
down onto the street.
The
incredible carnage - citywide burnings, stabbings, drownings,
strangulations, rapes, thefts, and massive property destruction
- continued unabated for about six weeks, from mid-December
1937 through the beginning of February 1938. Young or old,
male or female, anyone could be shot on a whim by any Japanese
soldier for any reason. Corpses could be seen everywhere throughout
the city. The streets of Nanking were said to literally have
run red with blood.
Those
who were not killed on the spot were taken to the outskirts
of the city and forced to dig their own graves, large rectangular
pits that would be filled with decapitated corpses resulting
from killing contests the Japanese held among themselves.
Other times, the Japanese forced the Chinese to bury each
other alive in the dirt.
After
this period of unprecedented violence, the Japanese eased
off somewhat and settled in for the duration of the war. To
pacify the population during the long occupation, highly addictive
narcotics, including opium and heroin, were distributed by
Japanese soldiers to the people of Nanking, regardless of
age. An estimated 50,000 persons became addicted to heroin
while many others lost themselves in the city's opium dens.
In
addition, the notorious Comfort Women system was introduced
which forced young Chinese women to become slave-prostitutes,
existing solely for the sexual pleasure of Japanese soldiers.
News
reports of the happenings in Nanking appeared in the official
Japanese press and also in the West, as page-one reports in
newspapers such as the New York Times. Japanese news reports
reflected the militaristic mood of the country in which any
victory by the Imperial Army resulting in further expansion
of the Japanese empire was celebrated. Eyewitness reports
by Japanese military correspondents concerning the sufferings
of the people of Nanking also appeared. They reflected a mentality
in which the brutal dominance of subjugated or so-called inferior
peoples was considered just. Incredibly, one paper, the Japan
Advertiser, actually published a running count of the heads
severed by two officers involved in a decapitation contest,
as if it was some kind of a sporting match.
In
the United States, reports published in the New York Times,
Reader's Digest and Time Magazine, were greeted with skepticism
from the American public. The stories smuggled out of Nanking
seemed almost too fantastic to be believed.
Overall,
most Americans had only a passing knowledge or little interest
in Asia. Political leaders in both America and Britain remained
overwhelmingly focused on the situation in Europe where Adolf
Hitler was rapidly re-arming Germany while at the same time
expanding the borders of the Nazi Reich through devious political
maneuvers.
Back
in Nanking, however, all was not lost. An extraordinary group
of about 20 Americans and Europeans remaining in the city,
composed of missionaries, doctors and businessmen, took it
upon themselves to establish an International Safety Zone.
Using Red Cross flags, they brazenly declared a 2.5 square-mile
area in the middle of the city off limits to the Japanese.
On numerous occasions, they also risked their lives by personally
intervening to prevent the execution of Chinese men or the
rape of women and young girls.
These
Westerners became the unsung heroes of Nanking, working day
and night to the point of exhaustion to aid the Chinese. They
also wrote down their impressions of the daily scenes they
witnessed, with one describing Nanking as "hell on earth."
Another wrote of the Japanese soldiers: "I did not imagine
that such cruel people existed in the modern world."
About 300,000 Chinese civilians took refuge inside their Safety
Zone. Almost all of the people who did not make it into the
Zone during the Rape of Nanking ultimately perished.