The Memorial Hall for Compatriots killed by Japanese invaders ( 2003-12-02 16:24) (chinadaily.com.cn)
The Memorial Hall for Compatriots killed in the Nanjing Massacre by Japanese
Force of Aggression is located in the southwestern corner of Nanjing known as
Jiangdongmen, which used to be one of the execution grounds and mass burial
places of the cruel holocaust.
Occupying an area about 28000 square meters with a floor space of 3000, it
was built in 1985 in memory of the 300,000 victims in the event. Later, in 1995
it was enlarged and renovated. The buildings in the complex are fashioned out of
black and white granite blocks, looking spectacular and magnificent, rendering a
feeling of solemnity and reverence. It is an exhibition site with historical
records and objects as well as architecture, sculptures and video and film
projections to unfold a specific chapter of history concerning one of the
ugliest experiences forced on mankind.
The Memorial consists of three parts: the outdoor exhibits, the remaining
bones of the killed and the museum for historical material displaying. In the
outdoor sector, group sculptures, full-length statures, relief carvings,
signboards, monuments, redeeming and repentant tablets, withered trees and
broken walls as well as a wall carved with the names of part of the victims so
far that have been located cluster together with green shrubs and lawns to
suggest a graveyard-style architecture with the themes of life and death, grief
and indignation. A building shaped like a coffin is to shelter some of the
victims' bones excavated from the "pots of thousands of bodies" right in the
site when the memorial was in in construction-an iron evidence for the bloody
crimes committed by the aggressive Japanese troops. The museum lies half in the
ground like a colossal tomb. Inside, an immense collection of pictures, objects,
charts and photographs relate the horror of the Rape of Nanjing. Through a
versatility of means for exhibitions such as lighted cabinets, sand trays, clay
moldings, oil paintings, micro-computers appliances, documentary shows and so
on, the tragedy of the cruel holocaust in Nanjing and the beastly atrocities of
the Japanese militarists are pictured and recounted.
Past experience, if not forgotten, is the guide for the future. The Nanjing
Memorial has become an important site for international communities to pray for
PEACE as well as site for historic and cultural exchanges. In China, it is also
a "national demonstrative educational base for patriotism".
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