This personally tics me off to no end. He was the closest thing to the Oskar Schindler of the Second Sino-Japanese War and was dismissed and administratively and economically punished after the war for terrible reasons. It should not have taken him decades after his death for him to receive the recognition he really deserved.
What we don’t know is that the Japanese were at times more successful than the Nazis in the same things the Nazis were doing. How many Chinese people they killed is sickening.
counterfitster on January 29th, 2026 at 05:17 UTC »
It's still crazy to me that both Japanese and German diplomats tried to save people from their ally's respective genocides.
00Qant5689 on January 29th, 2026 at 05:29 UTC »
This personally tics me off to no end. He was the closest thing to the Oskar Schindler of the Second Sino-Japanese War and was dismissed and administratively and economically punished after the war for terrible reasons. It should not have taken him decades after his death for him to receive the recognition he really deserved.
pikkdogs on January 29th, 2026 at 05:36 UTC »
What we don’t know is that the Japanese were at times more successful than the Nazis in the same things the Nazis were doing. How many Chinese people they killed is sickening.