A Japanese historian has just found more evidence of the
Japanese germ warfare after his four-day investigation from last
Thursday to Sunday in Yiwu of east China's Zhejiang Province.
"The Japanese germ warfare has damaged the social structure in
Chinese countryside and even family ties," said Makoto Ueda, a
49-year-old professor of history with the Rikkyo University in
Tokyo, who planned to write a book based on his newly discovered 47
books of family tree from the Chongshan Village.
According to the family tree, 404 villagers, or one third of the
village's population then, were killed by plague in the autumn of
1942. Twenty-three families were even extinguished from the
village.
"The society of China composed of clans," said Ueda, who notes
that most people in a village always share a same ancestor and
surname. The germ warfare had almost wiped out four generations
from the 1,000-year-old family tree, said the professor.
The germ warfare also affected the confidence and kinship among
family members, according to Ueda. "Some of the Wang escaped to
other places and lost the family ties."
Studies by Chinese and foreign scholars have shown that
between1931 and 1945, some 270,000 Chinese people fell victims of
Japanese germ warfare.
Makoto Ueda, who has spent over 20 years studying history of
Chinese rural areas, plans to name his new book as Plague and
Village and publish it in the first half of next year.
He hopes that the book could help more Japanese know Chinese
culture and boost mutual understanding and friendship between the
two nations.
Ueda's last story in 1998 about germ warfare based on a visit to
the Chongshan Village has been included in the Japanese textbook
for middle school students.
On Nov. 15, 2000, Makoto Ueda testified before the grand jury
for the Chinese germ warfare victims and relatives of deceased
ones.
(Xinhua News Agency August 21, 2006)