Weird History
The Rape of Nanking: Six Weeks That Shocked the World In December 1937, Japanese forces captured Nanking (now Nanjing), the capital of Nationalist China. What followed was six weeks of systematic atrocities so extreme that even Nazi officials in the city were horrified. Japanese soldiers massacred an estimated 200,000 to 300,000 civilians and prisoners of war, raped tens of thousands of women and girls (aged 8 to 80), looted and burned the city, and engaged in acts of cruelty that shocked the world. The violence was systematic and deliberately terroristic. Japanese commanders gave soldiers permission to do whatever they wanted. Soldiers competed to see who could kill 100 people fastest with a sword - newspapers published the "scores." Families were forced to watch atrocities before being killed. Bodies filled the streets and the Yangtze River. The city became hell on earth for six weeks. Unlike many atrocities, the Rape of Nanking was extensively documented by Westerners who stayed. John Rabe, a German Nazi Party member, created the Nanking Safety Zone - a protected area where he and other foreigners sheltered 200,000 Chinese civilians, literally standing between them and Japanese soldiers. American missionary Minnie Vautrin protected thousands of women, recording horrors in her diary until trauma drove her to suicide years later. Missionary John Magee secretly filmed atrocities with a 16mm camera - footage that became evidence at war crimes trials. Photographs show Japanese soldiers posing with severed heads and smiling next to victims. The documentation is extensive and undeniable - yet Japan has spent decades downplaying or denying what happened, creating ongoing diplomatic crises with China. At the Tokyo War Crimes Trials, several commanders were executed, but many perpetrators were never prosecuted. Post-war Japan downplayed the massacre in textbooks, leading to international controversy that continues today. This episode explores the fall of Nanking, the six weeks of documented atrocities, the Safety Zone heroes who saved 200,000 people, the extensive photo and film evidence, the Tokyo trials, and why this massacre remains politically controversial 85+ years later. Keywords: weird history, Rape of Nanking, Nanjing Massacre, Sino-Japanese War, World War II, Japanese atrocities, Chinese history, John Rabe, Nanking Safety Zone, war crimes, WWII Asia Perfect for listeners who love: WWII history, Asian history, war crimes, survivor stories, and atrocities that shaped modern international relations. Warning: This episode contains extremely graphic descriptions of mass murder, sexual violence, and torture. This is one of the darkest episodes in this series. Listener discretion is strongly advised.
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