Content Warning: This article discusses war crimes and civilian suffering during World War II. Reader discretion is advised.
In the winter of 1937, as snow fell over the ancient capital of China, Nanking descended into one of the darkest chapters in modern history. Over six harrowing weeks, Japanese troops occupying the city committed mass executions, looting, and widespread sexual violence against civilians — an event that would later be known as the Rape of Nanking.

Historians estimate that between 200,000 and 300,000 Chinese civilians and prisoners of war were killed. For many survivors, the nightmare never truly ended.

The Fall of Nanking
When Japanese forces stormed the city on December 13, 1937, China’s capital was already battered from months of war. The once-bustling streets of Nanking soon turned into a graveyard. Homes were set ablaze, entire families were forced from their houses, and columns of prisoners were marched to the city’s outskirts — never to return.

Foreign journalists and missionaries who witnessed the invasion documented what they saw. “The car just had to drive over bodies,” wrote The New York Times correspondent Tillman Durdin, who was among the few Westerners allowed to report from the scene.
A City in Terror
The occupation quickly descended into chaos. Civilians were targeted without mercy; men suspected of being Chinese soldiers were executed in mass shootings along the Yangtze River, their bodies left to float downstream. Women and children, trapped inside their homes, suffered unspeakable abuses.

An American missionary, James McCallum, recorded the terror in his diary: “Never have I heard or read such brutality. Every night, we heard the cries — and every morning, the silence.”
The Japanese soldiers’ actions shocked even their allies. In letters later uncovered by historians, some officers admitted that their troops had “lost all sense of humanity.”
The Safety Zone: A Glimmer of Humanity
Amid the horror, a small group of foreigners led by German businessman John Rabe — a member of the Nazi Party — established what became known as the Nanking Safety Zone. Within its boundaries, they sheltered an estimated 200,000 civilians from slaughter.

Rabe’s diary later revealed the scale of his defiance. “It was not courage,” he wrote, “but the simple duty of a human being.” His actions, along with those of several missionaries and Chinese doctors, remain one of the few lights in that time of darkness.
Aftermath and Denial
When the massacre ended in early 1938, Nanking was left in ruins. The city’s population had been decimated, and its survivors carried invisible wounds for the rest of their lives. After Japan’s defeat in World War II, several officers were tried and executed for war crimes, including General Iwane Matsui.

But the legacy of Nanking remains complex — and contentious. For decades, Japanese officials offered only partial acknowledgment of what occurred. Some denied the massacre outright; others minimized its scale. It wasn’t until 1995 that Japan’s government issued a formal apology for its wartime actions, though even that remains politically divisive.

Author Iris Chang, whose groundbreaking book The Rape of Nanking revived international awareness of the tragedy, once wrote:
“To forget the past is to invite it to happen again.”
Remembering the Forgotten Holocaust
Today, the Nanjing Massacre Memorial Hall stands on the site where thousands were executed. Visitors leave flowers, letters, and silent tears. Each December, China observes a national day of mourning to honor the victims — not out of hatred, but remembrance.

The ghosts of Nanking are not gone; they are warnings carved into history.
Their stories remind the world that humanity’s darkest moments must never be erased, no matter how far away — or how uncomfortable — they may seem.