A Review By: Amelia
I’ve had a grim fascination with World War Two since I was a
child thanks to my grandfather who told me countless war stories. I thought I
knew everything there was to know about the war into a few years ago when I
read a historical fiction novel called The
Devil of Nanking (which I have also reviewed for this blog). It had details
about a part of the war that I had no idea existed: the Asian invasions and
conflict that Japan roused
in China.
Since discovering this facts, I’ve had an even grimer fascination with the rape
of Nanking and have read all the material I
could find on the topic. That is how I came into possession of the book The Good Man of Nanking.
The Good Man of Nanking
is a diary that documents one of World War Two’s most horrific incidents of
genocide, one which the Japanese have steadfastly refused to acknowledge. In
November 1937, as Japanese troops overran the Chinese capital of Nanking and
began a campaign of torture, rape, and murder against its citizens, one man put
himself at risk and in order to save the lives of 200,000 poor Chinese.
John Rabe was
a German businessman and member of the Nazi party who is best known for his
efforts to stop the atrocities of the Japanese army during the
Nanking Occupation and his work to protect and help the Chinese civilians during
the event. The Nanking Safety Zone, which he helped to
establish, sheltered approximately 200,000 Chinese people from slaughter during
the massacre. He officially represented Germany and
acted as senior chief of the European–American establishment that remained in
Nanking when the city fell to the Japanese troops. He kept an extensive account
in the form of a diary documenting the fall and subsequent rape of Nanking. His
diary includes the years leading up to and during the Rape of Nanking and after
he left China and returned to Germany.
Rabe’s record of this often forgotten World War Two massacre
is an awe-inspiring tale of one man’s generosity and bravery in the face of
appalling, unnecessary human brutality. Rabe’s thoughts convey not only jarring
information that few people knew about, but also his emotions. This diary is
that of a man who was pushed to his breaking point but just kept going because
he knew if he didn’t, more people would have been slaughtered. Rabe was a Nazi
but much against what we know Nazis to be. He was a good man and without him,
what happened in Nanking could have been much worse for much longer.
My final thoughts on The
Good Man of Nanking are that it’s an interesting book with a very niche
topic. It’s certainly not something a casual nonfiction reader could pick up
and fall into, but a history buff might find many new (if mostly disturbing)
facts.
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