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War crimes against Russians by Japan. It began with Unit 731 for Russians leaving Harbin.

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Ghost town: searching for remnants of Russia in the Chinese city of Harbin - The Calvert Journal
20 AUGUST 2014
The city of Harbin in north-eastern China was once a thriving, cosmopolitan centre for Russian culture. Jacob Dreyer went there in search of this unique historical legacy, but found something very different
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    Entrance to the “Russian Village” in Harbin
It is not rare for a civilisation to abruptly falter, give way and fold into a new one. This insight seems obvious in the territories of the former Soviet Union — a universe transformed into a memory overnight. It is more rare that one settlement transforms into another, that a city turned ruin continues to be inhabited, that the collapsing buildings and boulevards stained by a thousand footsteps, after the apocalypse, host new forms of human life, new memories. Harbin, in the far north-east of China, used to be a very Russian metropolis. Once called the Paris of the east — although it’s not the only contender for the title — it was a haven for political refugees, fascists, Bolsheviks, painters and poets. Now, all that is gone.

Not quite all: traces of the old city do remain. Russian writing adorns the walls; St Petersburg-style pastel-coloured buildings line boulevards where they sell black bread and sausage; the nostalgic Russian song Moscow Nights plays everywhere. But these are just traces: this is now a thoroughly Chinese city of some nine million official residents (but most likely many more) — Han Chinese, Mongol and Manchu. Russians are visitors here, in the ashes of a great Russian city. They wander dejectedly through beer gardens, on their way to trade delegations, or maybe to nightclubs where they are paid to dance.



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    How did Harbin happen? It was founded by Russian colonists in the late 19th century, heyday of the Russian Empire, on the banks of the Sungari River inside the territory of the Chinese Empire. A forbiddingly cold location, it was part of the homeland of the Manchurian ethnic group, the founders of the Q’ing dynasty. The whole area was legally off-limits to ethnic Chinese settlers until late in the 19th century, and remained a largely empty terrain of nomads and, occasionally, bandits and criminals. The existence of Harbin, like that of cities such as Vladivostok or Novisibirsk, represented the penetration of the Russian culture into the heart of the north through technology: in Harbin, before anything else, there was a train station. In 1898 China had granted Russia the right to build a shortcut on the Trans-Siberian Railway across Manchuria, from Chita to Vladivostok. The building of the railway brought engineers, and then refugees, White Russians, smugglers, tricksters and soldiers who shot at random out of the train window at the Asian men they saw trudging through the snow. These men and their ancestors would later be known in Russian as KVZhDisty — “people of the Chinese Eastern Railway”.
    • The vast urban planning projects of Soviet-era Russia are being reborn in modern China
    Harbin was among the most cosmopolitan, multi-ethnic cities of the Russian empire, without rival in the Far East

    At the same time, due to the disastrous mismanagement of the Q’ing dynasty — this was the last decade of the Chinese empire — the peasants of Shandong and Hebei provinces were driven out by famines and overpopulation, north across loose borders, in search of a frontier of their own. The Chinese settlement of Manchuria was very distinct from the Russian one, however. The latter was managed by politician and industrialist Count Witte — a testament to the strength of the state. The Chinese migration, in contrast, was a population flood inspired by social dysfunction, attesting to the collapse of the Chinese state; these migrants came to Harbin as a port of last resort.

    A city flourished and grew in this most unlikely of refuges. For three decades, early 20th-century Harbin was among the most cosmopolitan, multi-ethnic cities of the Russian empire, without rival in the Far East. It had grand boulevards named for Russian writers, onion-domed churches, large businesses… After the Revolution, Harbin became the home to a unique culture — that of the exiled White Russians, driven out by the Bolsheviks’ Red Army. It is perhaps a historical curiosity that the Russian Fascist Party, the first Russian ethnocentric fascist political organisation, was founded in Harbin, where they smashed synagogue windows and hassled Jews staying in the Moderne Hotel through the early 1930s. Like Shanghai, Harbin, city of no passports, was a home for Russian Jewish culture— now preserved in a Jewish Culture Archive in the barely used Harbin Synagogue (which doubles as an architectural history museum) and in Heilongjiang University’s Sino-Israel Archive.

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    Harbin’s poshest district, now called Daoli, was once populated by boulevardiers, churches and shops for Russian foods. Even to this day, Harbin is one of the only places in China where bread is an everyday food (even the local word for bread here is borrowed from Russian). A hundred years ago, in cosmopolitan Harbin, the Chinese lived in Daowai, a dangerous enclave that was periodically locked off from the remainder of the city, for instance during epidemics.

    Harbin timeline
    1898-1926: Controlled by Russia via the Chinese Eastern Railway
    1926-1929: Chinese city council with Russian members
    1929-1931: Controlled by warlord Zhang Xueliang
    1931-1945: Japanese control
    1945-1946: Soviet Red Army
    1946-present: Controlled by the Chinese Communist Party


    By 1926, however, the city council came to be dominated by a majority of Chinese tradesmen. In truth, the Russians had lost compelling power when their homeland changed into a new nation. Harbin entered a period of violent contestation: Chinese warlord Zhang Xueliang took over the China Eastern Railway in 1929, which was followed by a Japanese invasion of Harbin in 1931. The period of Japanese domination lasted until the Soviet Red Army came in 1945. These decades saw the daily life of the city become increasingly gruesome: when the Japanese took over, they started sweeping Russians and Russian Jews off the street to be used as human subjects in the infamous Unit 731, a covert army chemical and biological weapons research facility which undertook brutal experiments on living victims. Most families forbade their children from being outside after 5pm.



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    Japanese Army in Harbin, 1932

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    Old postcard of Harbin. Images provided thanks to Professor Dan Ben-Canaan of the Sino-Israel Research and Study Center at the School of Western Studies at Heilongjiang University in Harbin

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    Japanese Army in Harbin, 1932

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    Old postcard of Harbin. Images provided thanks to Professor Dan Ben-Canaan of the Sino-Israel Research and Study Center at the School of Western Studies at Heilongjiang University in Harbin

  1. The 1949 victory of the Chinese Communists began in Harbin. This was logical enough: this city of outcasts, the poor, and the criminal would always have a special resonance for the party. But this victory also marked the end of Harbin as home for those who couldn’t fit in in Soviet Russia, both because it was Communist, and because it was decidedly Chinese. Decades rolled by, and the last Russians desperately sought to emigrate to Australia, Israel or wherever would take them. The USSR itself turned against Stalin, while in Harbin lovers sat on benches in riverside Stalin Park.

    The only traces of “Russian-ness” are objects which can be purchased, foods, souvenirs, clothes

    The lost Harbin Russians… The last two passed away in the 1980s: one in a hospital for the mentally ill; the other, a Jewish lady who had lived by herself for decades, even as the streets echoed with the hoarse, bloody shouts of the Cultural Revolution, died alone in her bed, under which were stuffed archival fragments and decaying photographs.

    At the same time in the 1980s a new order came to China, one which welcomed western (and Russian) culture once it had been converted into commodity form. With it came a Harbin with no Russians, but plentiful matryoshka dolls, bottles of vodka and fur hats, as well as grand apartment buildings painted in the hues of St Petersburg and statues of Russian poets. But it was only when the Soviet Union dissolved that the Russians themselves started trickling back, this time as businessmen looking for new markets, as prostitutes, and as the parents of children whose diseases couldn’t be treated in Russian hospitals except at a prohibitive price.​
 
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  1. A visitor to Harbin will see Russians in fashion advertisements and Russians in hotel bars, Russian writing on the walls and Russian songs played by saxophonists in the street. This world, however, is a Chinese one: the billboards in the suburbs may feature blonde Russian women, but “Harbin welcomes you” is written in Mandarin. The Russian history of this place now exists only as a recuperated, commodified component of the city’s “urban branding,” alongside the park for endangered tigers and the ice sculpture festival. The Russian culture which created Harbin is still very much on display, but absent of a significant Russian population, an everyday life has disappeared, and the only traces of “Russian-ness” are objects which can be purchased — foods, souvenirs, clothes.

    The symbol of this commodification is “Russian Village” — a fake Russian settlement in the Sun Island pleasure park, replete with ersatz versions of Russian architecture. It's a sort of ethnographic theme park like the one in Jia Zhang Ke’s film The World (2004), in which major world destinations are reconstructed in China. In this village, Harbin natives can pay to get their picture with a “real Russian”, in the heart of a former Russian town. But this contact is empty. What is Russia? What was Russia? The residents of Harbin will never know.
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You can clearly see many white victims below in the article




this is what Japanese are proud of
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Even the links with the graphic images are prohibited.

BTW, most people will Google the victim pictures of the unit 731 by themselves, so you don't have to risk yourself.

Those anti-Russian trolls will be happy to see you getting banned, and Nihonjin1051 will be the one who reports you if he seen this.
 
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Good to know. By educating ourselves on these brutal crimes do we attain some measure of satisfaction for the victims. The memories of what they suffered and went through will be passed down, generation to generation, as a salutary lesson to what happens when you allow your country to be weak in the face of depraved fascist murderers.

Chinese and Russians will never allow Japan to sweep their crimes under the rug. And to think that some Japanese right-wingers deny that Unit 731 even existed. Japan's neo-fascists are playing a dangerous game. Forget about China uniting Japan, and a bunch of banana republics. Japan's militarization will unite China, Russia, and South Korea. I know which bloc I'd be more afraid of....
 
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Right after the war, USSR captured 640 thousand + Japanese troops and used them for slave labor in Siberia.

Some stayed there for 10+ years.

CCP also wouldn't have won against KMT without the captured Japanese equipments. Japan had 1.2 million troops in Manchuria, and Stalin gave all the captured weapons to Mao.

You can also read how Mao recruited some Japanese into his army to teach him how to use their equipments.
 
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Right after the war, USSR captured 640 thousand + Japanese troops and used them for slave labor in Siberia.

Some stayed there for 10+ years.

CCP also wouldn't have won against KMT without the captured Japanese equipments. Japan had 1.2 million troops in Manchuria, and Stalin gave all the captured weapons to Mao.

You can also read how Mao recruited some Japanese into his army to teach him how to use their equipments.

The early fathers of the PLAF were actually former Japanese officers and pilots of the Imperial Air Force.

@cnleio , isn't this true?
 
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The early fathers of the PLAF were actually former Japanese officers and pilots of the Imperial Air Force.

@cnleio , isn't this true?

yes, especially considering the advance fighters were Japanese, oh wait, it was Soviet. No, it was Soviet. Japanese weapons were maybe great on the sea but on land and in the air, the Soviets was head and shoulders above pretty much everyone.

And we were the little brother of the Soviets at the time.

So no, PLAAF was built with the Soviets and KMT defectors.
 
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yes, especially considering the advance fighters were Japanese, oh wait, it was Soviet. No, it was Soviet. Japanese weapons were maybe great on the sea but on land and in the air, the Soviets was head and shoulders above pretty much everyone.

And we were the little brother of the Soviets at the time.

So no, PLAAF was built with the Soviets and KMT defectors.

I believe that IJAF officers were crucial in the training of Chinese pilots and were pivotal in forming the PLAF.

In regards to ground forces, there were thousands of Imperial Army recruits who fought on the side of the PLA after the end of the war. Many Imperial Army officers helped train Chinese recruits of the PLA how to use Japanese weapons , as well as ground tactics.
 
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Right after the war, USSR captured 640 thousand + Japanese troops and used them for slave labor in Siberia.

Some stayed there for 10+ years.

CCP also wouldn't have won against KMT without the captured Japanese equipments. Japan had 1.2 million troops in Manchuria, and Stalin gave all the captured weapons to Mao.

You can also read how Mao recruited some Japanese into his army to teach him how to use their equipments.

Soviet had way more German POWs than Japanese, Did the German also refuse to admit to their war crimes?
There wouldn't be a country called Israel if not for the holocaust . you think Jews should thank Hitler?

I believe that IJAF officers were crucial in the training of Chinese pilots and were pivotal in forming the PLAF.

In regards to ground forces, there were thousands of Imperial Army recruits who fought on the side of the PLA after the end of the war. Many Imperial Army officers helped train Chinese recruits of the PLA how to use Japanese weapons , as well as ground tactics.

there were Japanese advisers on both sides, not only PLA but also KMT.
 
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there were Japanese advisers on both sides, not only PLA but also KMT.

Yes, that's right. Its just an interesting tid bit. Its fascinating how some Imperial soldiers never stopped fighting. After Japan's surrender, they continued on fighting in China...

Imperial soldiers also, after the end of the war, joined the cause of native peoples in South East Asia as in the case in Vietnam and Indonesia. Many of whom fought the returning colonial powers.
 
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I believe that IJAF officers were crucial in the training of Chinese pilots and were pivotal in forming the PLAF.

In regards to ground forces, there were thousands of Imperial Army recruits who fought on the side of the PLA after the end of the war. Many Imperial Army officers helped train Chinese recruits of the PLA how to use Japanese weapons , as well as ground tactics.

I see where the confusion come from, the something plan, forgot the name, was initiated by Japanese headliners and used by KMT. Some Japanese stayed behind to help the KMT in order to keep the organization, and weapons, they thought they could stay behind and go at it again when the time comes, as it turns out, the time was never as they were almost all wiped out by CCP.

Some went to Taiwan and some went back to Japan, actually I think most went back to Japan, I mean the ones still alive.


I think CCP might have also considered the Japanese soldiers, but the Soviets was very against it, if there's one thing about the communists, it's there ability to destroy anyone not communist, lol.

So, in a way yes, but mostly no.

I mean there are JApanese in the CCP, but not in the number that you are thinking.
 
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I see where the confusion come from, the something plan, forgot the name, was initiated by Japanese headliners and used by KMT. Some Japanese stayed behind to help the KMT in order to keep the organization, and weapons, they thought they could stay behind and go at it again when the time comes, as it turns out, the time was never as they were almost all wiped out by CCP.

Some went to Taiwan and some went back to Japan, actually I think most went back to Japan, I mean the ones still alive.


I think CCP might have also considered the Japanese soldiers, but the Soviets was very against it, if there's one thing about the communists, it's there ability to destroy anyone not communist, lol.

So, in a way yes, but mostly no.

I mean there are JApanese in the CCP, but not in the number that you are thinking.

Its just fascinating for me to hear stories of Imperial soldiers joining the Chinese after the end of the war. Btw, many of the Japanese who fought for either the KMT and/or the CCP chose to remain in China or Taiwan.
 
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Its just fascinating for me to hear stories of Imperial soldiers joining the Chinese after the end of the war. Btw, many of the Japanese who fought for either the KMT and/or the CCP chose to remain in China.
Really? German captured soldiers also made up of the bulk of the German army to deter the Soviets by the US.

BTW, they didn't so much join as they had fantasies of a dream that would never come to be, though at that time, I think it's not out of the world to assume it could. Nobody though CCP could win.

They really just fought for themselves, not for China, but either way, it is what it is, their effect was as it turned out minimal, as the weapons and morale was more or less gone, and the CCP was becoming better equipped than the Japanese, with way higher morale.


Many is also the wrong word, there was 1.2 million Japanese soldiers in China at the time of defeat, only a few thousand remain.
 
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Really? German captured soldiers also made up of the bulk of the German army to deter the Soviets by the US.

BTW, they didn't so much join as they had fantasies of a dream that would never come to be, though at that time, I think it's not out of the world to assume it could. Nobody though CCP could win.

They really just fought for themselves, not for China, but either way, it is what it is, their effect was as it turned out minimal, as the weapons and morale was more or less gone, and the CCP was becoming better equipped than the Japanese, with way higher morale.


Many is also the wrong word, there was 1.2 million Japanese soldiers in China at the time of defeat, only a few thousand remain.

So the Japanese soldiers contributed very little in the end and how much of help was it for the development of PLAAF?
 
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