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在线翻译:
szdaily -> In depth -> 
Nanjing’s mixed feelings about Japan
    2015-08-04  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    ON summer days, Yang Rui enjoys strolling near an ancient wall encircling East China’s Nanjing.

    Her leisure moment is seldom disturbed by the bricks’ pock-markings from bullets left 78 years ago when invading Japanese troops captured the then Chinese capital.

    “I seldom noticed those marks of war before,” admits Yang, a 25-year-old Nanjing native who is now working in advertising in Tokyo.

    Even as China marks the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II and the war against Japanese Aggression, it’s possible to go about daily life in this bustling city without being haunted by the Japanese brutality that followed the invasion. But memories of the Nanjing Massacre never vanish.

    “Every December 13, sirens sound across the city to remind us of the massacre. It was the darkest moment in modern China, it happened right here in Nanjing and I will never forget,” Yang told Xinhua.

    Japanese troops occupied Nanjing on Dec. 13, 1937. Over the next six weeks, they slaughtered 300,000 people in the city.

    Local schools are one of the places where Nanjing residents’ mixed feelings about Japan are most keenly felt.

    Speaking Japanese may help a young person secure a good job, as Yang found, but Japanese language courses are understandably not the first choice for most Nanjing students.

    At Nanjing Foreign Language School, one of Jiangsu Province’s top high schools, students study languages for six years alongside their regular courses.

    The school declined to give the number of students enrolled each year for the Japanese classes, but Yang, who studied Japanese at the school from 2002 to 2008, said the class usually had a mere dozen or so students while she was a student there.

    Even this small number could “fluctuate up and down depending on Sino-Japanese relations,” she says.

    According to a teacher at the school, “People in Nanjing are particularly sensitive to Japan-related topics. Some parents do not want their children to learn Japanese because of history.”

    Despite the opposition, it is because of exposure such as the Japanese classes that the next generation of Nanjingers can learn about Japan and its people.

    “Our Japanese teacher was an old gentleman. He was very patient with us,” Yang recalls. “We later learned that he came to China as a volunteer just because he wanted to reflect on history.

    “Even after leaving the school, we kept in contact by writing letters. He once told me that every year when the siren in Nanjing wailed to commemorate the victims of the Nanjing Massacre, he would hide in his room with a heavy heart.”

    “That was an impressive detail for me,” Yang said. “Friendly exchanges between us and Japanese people should continue.”

    Her feeling are shared by many of Nanjing’s young people, who grew up in an environment in which heart-wrenching recollections of the past mixed with the reality of more tangible ties between China and Japan.

    Visits to the Memorial Hall of Victims of the Nanjing Massacre are a regular fixture on the curriculum for Nanjing students.

    “The visit was a shocking experience and I was deeply sad afterward... but it did not stop me from liking Japanese culture,” says Zhang Siwei, a 27-year-old Nanjinger.

    Decades of China-Japan exchanges in business and culture since 1972, when the two countries normalized their ties, have influenced daily life in many ways.

    From home appliances to pop culture and literature, Japanese elements can be found throughout China. Nanjing is no exception.

    Toyota and Honda cars zip up and down its main street. A few blocks away, customers shop in a Uniqlo store.

    With China marking the war anniversary, publications about the Nanjing Massacre and WWII take up most of the shelves in a bookstore in downtown Nanjing. On one corner of the shop, however, a young man reads a book by popular Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami.

    “Japanese TV dramas and animated films were popular when I was in high school. I remember talking about them and playing Nintendo with my classmates,” says Zhang.

    Nevertheless, Siwei is not Zhang’s real name. Any opinion on the Japanese is likely to court controversy in the city, as indicated by the fact that some of the locals Xinhua spoke to for this article requested anonymity.

    Guo Biqiang, a 59-year-old Nanjing native and researcher at the Second Historical Archives of China, believes cultural exchanges among the young are a major trend of our times. But he also urged the Japanese to be more sensitive to the feelings of Nanjing people.

    “It is when talking about the Nanjing Massacre that we require right-wing Japanese politicians to face up to history,” said Guo.

    “The people of Nanjing will never forget what happened in the winter of 1937,” Guo said. “We don’t have to always talk about history, but it is always there, just like the bullet holes in our ancient wall.”(Xinhua)

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