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After burning the Yasukuni Shrine, he burned the Japanese Embassy

author:Aoki in the distance

Author: Haizhong News Agency

Yasukuni Shrine, Japan.

Originally established to commemorate the anti-samurai who died in battle during the Meiji Restoration, it was called the Tokyo Spirits Club at the time.

The original intention was simple, to appease the wronged souls through sacrifice, so as not to bring disaster to the people.

Because the Japanese believe that the souls of those who have been slaughtered in this world because of the power struggle are likely to return with resentment.

In order to dispel their resentment, the Japanese began to sacrifice the souls of these dead people through the method of soul-calling clubs.

In 1879, the Tokyo Spirits' Shrine was renamed Yasukuni Shrine

After burning the Yasukuni Shrine, he burned the Japanese Embassy

After the Meiji Restoration, the shrine began to enshrine soldiers who died in Japan' wars, including the Sino-Japanese War, the Russo-Japanese War, and World War II.

As a result, japanese shrines throughout the country are managed by the Ministry of internal affairs, but yasukuni shrines are managed by the military.

Today's Yasukuni Shrine houses nearly 2.5 million shrines dedicated to the Japanese war dead.

Of these, 2.1 million died in World War II, including 14 World War II A war criminals and 200 Class C war criminals.

In 1978, the Yasukuni Shrine secretly enshrined 14 Class-A war criminals who had been convicted and executed by the Allied Far Eastern Military Tribunal in the names of their offerings.

They are.

Eiji Kojo desk, Doihara Koji, Matsui Ishinegimura Hyotaro, Koki Hatada, Seishiro Sakagaki, Akira Muto, Yosuke Matsuba, Osamu Mizuno, Toshio Shiraki, Koichiro Hiranuma, Kuniaki Kobane, Mijiro Umetsu, Shigeru Kaku.

These sinful and evil war criminals returned to their country and became gods to be worshipped.

After burning the Yasukuni Shrine, he burned the Japanese Embassy

It is tolerable, and it is intolerable.

The wounds inflicted by the Japanese army on the Chinese during World War II are irreparable, and we were born in peacetime, and we are not qualified or able to forgive the Japanese for our ancestors.

With so many war criminals enshrined, it can be said that most of the devils enshrined in the Yasukuni Shrine have the blood of the victims on their hands, like fake executioners.

Since World War II, the Yasukuni Shrine has become the most sensitive node between Japan and other victimized countries.

The Yasukuni Shrine is another insult and provocation to the country that has been harmed by Japan, and is undoubtedly the archway of Japanese militarism.

Any visit to the Yasukuni Shrine is intolerable and is a summoning of the soul of militarism.

Such a place should not exist at all.

In 2011, a major earthquake broke out in Japan, killing and injuring countless people for a time, and the survivors in Japan suffered serious psychological trauma.

After burning the Yasukuni Shrine, he burned the Japanese Embassy

At this time, Liu Qiang, a Chinese boy who was an English lecturer and psychotherapist in Guangzhou, went to Japan, hoping to become a volunteer to treat the psychological trauma of the local people.

Liu Qiang was born in a Guangdong anti-war family, and his grandfather Liu Beisheng was a regimental commander of the New Fourth Army.

Liu Beisheng sacrificed his life for the country in the War of Resistance Against Japan, at the age of 30, and was later awarded the title of "Revolutionary Martyr".

After burning the Yasukuni Shrine, he burned the Japanese Embassy

Liu Qiang's grandmother, Lee Nam Young, was a Korean who was captured by the Japanese army and sent to China as a comfort woman, and Li Nanying's life has since been completely rewritten.

After the end of World War II, my grandmother changed her name to Yang Ying and stayed in China to continue her life.

Liu Qiang has lived in his grandmother's house since he was a child, so he has a deep affection for his grandmother.

When Liu Qiang was 11 years old, his grandmother died of illness, and before he died, his grandmother told his family about this experience of being a comfort woman, and Liu Qiang's young heart has since planted a seed of disgust.

Due to the inconvenience of language communication, Liu Qiang, who had just arrived in Japan, was first assigned to a school in Wakayama Prefecture for a short course in Japanese.

Wakayama is home to many descendants of the Japanese army that invaded China, and the Japanese government has beautified that period of criminal history in its national education.

Therefore, when it comes to the history of the invasion of China, these people's faces are full of pride, which shocks Liu Qiang.

After burning the Yasukuni Shrine, he burned the Japanese Embassy

Once, the school held a party, and Liu Qiang was invited to perform on stage as a guest.

Liu Qiang took the opportunity to tell the history of the Nanjing Massacre in front of the whole school, which annoyed the school.

The next day, Liu Qiang was expelled from the school.

Liu Qiang, who left school, did not implicate hatred with the Japanese people he now has.

As a volunteer, he went to Fukushima, the disaster area, to carry out a series of volunteer work such as psychological counseling for the victims.

Soon, Liu Qiang's kindness was widely exposed by the Japanese media, which called him "a Chinese who truly loves Japan."

However, just as the volunteer work was about to end, something happened, and this incident completely ignited Liu Qiang.

On December 18, 2011, then-South Korean President Lee Myung-bak visited Japan and proposed to Japan to resolve the issue of comfort women, but Japanese Prime Minister Noda refused.

After burning the Yasukuni Shrine, he burned the Japanese Embassy

This is not the main thing, after the fact, 68 members of the Japanese Diet actually publicly visited the Yasukuni Shrine.

Liu Qiang, who heard the news, thought of what happened to his Korean grandmother, and he was completely angry.

Therefore, Liu Qiang decided to burn the Yasukuni Shrine!

On December 26, the day of Liu Qiang's grandmother's death, he really went.

The day before the operation, Liu Qiang bought several tin cans filled with gasoline from the supermarket and took a train from Fukushima to Tokyo.

Before the operation, Liu Qiang carefully inspected the area around the Yasukuni Shrine and finally found a small side door that was not open to tourists, and there was no monitoring around.

Before the operation, Liu Qiang booked a taxi so that he could quickly flee the scene after the operation.

Everything was ready, at two o'clock in the morning of the 26th, Liu Qiang came to the small side door of the pre-stepped point, looked around and found no one, pulled open the backpack, unscrewed the gasoline can, and spilled the gasoline on the base of the shrine and the national emblem at the top.

Then the fire began to burn...

After burning the Yasukuni Shrine, he burned the Japanese Embassy

Then, Liu Qiang took a taxi booked in advance and flew straight to the airport to South Korea.

Combined with the background at the time, the Japanese government once believed that the arson case must have been committed by South Koreans.

Afterwards, Liu Qiang, in order to prove his bloody nature as a Chinese dared, he made remarks on the Internet, claiming that he was the murderer of the arson case and would bear full responsibility for this matter.

Because Japan naturally denies this sinful history, refuses to apologize, and does not believe what Liu Qiang said.

So Liu Qiang decided to burn it again.

On January 8, 2012, Liu Qiang bought a can of gasoline from a gas station in Seoul, South Korea, and went to the Japanese Embassy.

He then ignited a flame bottle and smashed it against the outer wall of the embassy.

This time, Liu Qiang did not run away, but chose to stand where he was and wait for the police to arrest him.

Two minutes later, the police rushed to the scene to arrest Liu Qiang, and he truthfully explained to the police the reasons for his move.

After learning the truth, the South Korean police and the South Korean people not only did not regard Liu Qiang as an arsonist, but also once regarded Liu Qiang as a hero!

At that time, The South Korean authorities hired a team of luxurious lawyers to defend Liu Qiang.

In the end, Liu Qiang was sentenced to 10 months in prison for causing minor damage to the building.

The Japanese side, which heard about this, took a tough attitude and repeatedly pressured South Korea to extradite Liu Qiang to Japan.

The Chinese side, which heard about the incident, took a tougher stance and demanded that the South Korean government "never allow extradition to Japan."

When South Korea's Supreme Court tried whether to extradite Liu Qiang to Japan, many non-governmental anti-Japanese groups in South Korea expressed solidarity and held a huge parade, which once surrounded the door of the court.

In the end, South Korea sent Liu Qiang back to China on the grounds that the case did not comply with the Treaty on the Extradition of Criminals between South Korea and Japan.

Liu Qiang, who returned to China, did not usher in the peak of his life, but was very depressed.

In the eyes of many people, Liu Qiang is an extremist, and a few people call him a hero, but more people still regard him as an outlier.

The wife left with her daughter, the original unit was inconvenient to continue to hire, and the friends around him gradually alienated him.

For a long time, Liu Qiang almost suffered from depression.

At one point, he went to the japanese embassy to show his "calligraphy."

After burning the Yasukuni Shrine, he burned the Japanese Embassy

His appeal is this.

Japan apologized, compensated for the heinous crimes committed in World War II, and demolished the Yasukuni Shrine.

In recent years, Liu Qiang has joined the Ryukyu Historical Research Society.

He began to consult all the historical materials related to Japan.

Determined to inform the world of Japan's evil deeds.

Today's article ends.

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