It has been decades since Li Feng-qin’s (李鳳琴) father was cut apart by Japanese doctors at a covert base used for human experiments, but she still hopes Tokyo will confront one of World War II’s most barbaric Asian chapters.
“This debt of blood must be paid,” Li said, tearfully recalling his fate at Unit 731.
The world last week remembered 70 years since Soviet troops liberated Auschwitz, a site that has become a global byword for acts of inhumanity.
Photo: AFP
Eight months later, the Red Army was sweeping through northern China, where its forces found themselves at the gates of another camp, which still conjures visions of unspeakable horror.
Unit 731 — at first described as a lumber mill, then a water purification plant — was built to conduct research into germ warfare, weapons capabilities and the limits of the human body, rather than for mass extermination.
However, its remains echo many of the chilling hallmarks of a former Nazi death camp — a disused railway track, ghostly buildings and a biting winter chill.
One structure contains rows of cages that housed giant rats which Japanese doctors used to produce the bubonic plague unleashed on hundreds of thousands of Chinese.
Elsewhere, dozens of gruesome surgical instruments are laid out, including tiny weighing scales for internal organs and clamps to fix hysterical patients into position.
“Experiments were carried out without anesthetic so that the results would not be influenced,” said Gao Yubao, director of the camp museum, which Chinese authorities plan to expand.
Behind him, a video continually retells the story of a young Chinese woman who had her arms frozen stiff with ice, before being placed into a vat of hot water.
A reconstruction of the scene shows a Japanese doctor striking at the flesh, stripping it off and reducing her forearms to bones as her screams echo around the hall.
CONFRONTING HISTORY
Imperial Japan’s bloody invasion of China remains a major source of tension between Asia’s two biggest economies, and Beijing commonly calls on Tokyo to “confront history.”
The sprawling Unit 731 complex is in the southern outskirts of Harbin, the biggest city of Manchukuo, the puppet state set up by Japan after it occupied northern China in 1931.
At least 3,000 people, mostly Chinese civilians along with some Russians, Mongolians and Koreans, were experimented on and died between 1939 and 1945, according to Chinese state media.
Japan has repeatedly apologized for its part in World War II and acknowledges that it “caused tremendous damage and suffering.”
However, it has never officially recognized the atrocities that took place at Unit 731. The number has no particular significance there and few Japanese made any link when nationalist Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe posed in a fighter jet emblazoned with “731.”
Abe’s government denied any deliberate provocation.
Many educated Japanese know about Unit 731 and the events that took place there, although awareness among the general population is low.
Nonetheless, a Tokyo court ruled in 2002 that the former imperial army researched, developed and produced biological weapons and used them in China.
Japanese troops dropped plague-carrying fleas on villages, while contaminating wells and food with cholera germs, it said.
However, it turned down Chinese plaintiffs’ demands for compensation and a state apology, reasoning that was a government issue.
Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokeswoman Hua Chunying (華春瑩) said last week’s Holocaust Memorial Day was “a moment for everyone to draw lessons,” commending the “attitudes demonstrated by German leaders” in comments seen as a reference to Japan.
DOMESTIC DISASTERS
However, while China is quick to remind Japan of past wrongs, it has been far less willing to recognize the role of the Chinese Communist Party in domestic disasters, such as former Chinese leader Mao Zedong’s (毛澤東) Great Leap Forward and the ensuing famine that killed several tens of millions of people.
The Cultural Revolution of 1966 to 1976 and the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre have also never been historically scrutinized within the country.
Some of those at Unit 731 died in experiments testing weapons such as grenades and biological bombs. Others are said to have been buried alive or drowned.
Doctors injected prisoners with animal blood or forced them to share cells — or have sexual intercourse with — diseased inmates to test how infectious the conditions were, according to historians.
Li discovered her father’s fate more than half a century after he went missing in the spring of 1941, when a list of Unit 731 victims was discovered in archives in 1998.
Li Pengge (李鵬閣) spoke Chinese, Russian, Korean, Japanese and English, and was detained after refusing to help Japanese intelligence detect Soviet signals, his daughter said.
He faced his gruesome death on an operating table aged 25, before she was even born.
Now 73, she pointed to a graduation photograph of a tall, slender man.
“There’s no way to describe years of hardship seeking my father and the pain of knowing he’d been killed,” she said. “The Japanese pretended it was a lumber mill, and they called the Chinese ‘logs’ and treated them like pieces of wood.”
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