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Although I have not finished reading Zhang Chunru's "Nanjing Massacre" by Zhang Chunru, I have not finished reading it, but my heart cannot be calmed down for a long time. For the Chinese people, this is an incomparably painful history, japanese imperialism

Although I have not finished reading Zhang Chunru's "Nanjing Massacre" by Zhang Chunru, I have not finished reading it, but my heart cannot be calmed down for a long time. For the Chinese people, this is an incomparably painful history, and the evil deeds of Japanese imperialism are heinous, but the whole country is covering up and even trying to erase the existence of this history, which is really incomprehensible and even more unacceptable.

Zhang Chunru throws four questions at the beginning of the book: During the Nanjing Massacre, why did the Japanese soldiers behave completely out of line with the basic norms of human behavior? Why did Japanese officers allow or even encourage this runaway behavior to happen? How is the Japanese government involved? How did the Japanese government react to reports obtained from its own sources, as well as to news from foreigners at the scene of the Nanjing Massacre?

These questions, the words are pearls, and they are full of endless irony, and a country that cannot face history squarely, but once dreamed of dominating the world with its own projectile land, is really delusional and ridiculous.

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