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Japanese war orphan devotes himself to friendship between Japan, China(2)

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2015-06-24 14:11Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

"I read the book the day when Nakajima gave it to me at one sitting. I was moved by the characters in the book and I called Nakajima in the morning next day, asking him to bring more copies to my store," Nakamura said. "What I'm selling is not a book, but grateful feelings toward the Chinese people."

Nakamura decided to help sell the obscure autobiography and he even printed homemade leaflets to popularize the book that was published at Nakajima's own expense. The book, however, surprisingly became a bestseller in the small store in months.

Many readers said in their letters sent to Nakajima that the book was different from Japanese media's reports on China and they totally changed their views on the neighboring country. "If there is one more reader, there will be one more Japanese who will truly understand Chinese people's heart," said Nakajima.

After graduation from a high school in Japan, Nakajima had a chance to have a well-paid job, but he joined a Japan-China friendship association which sometimes paid their wages late.

"I have to follow Mr. Liang's instruction to contribute to friendship between Japan and China," he said.

Liang was a colleague of Nakajima when he worked at a local forestry agency in Ning'an. Nakajima said that it was Liang who told him that he could help to develop Japan-China ties if he returned to Japan when the two countries were at odds due to then Japanese prime minister Nobusuke Kishi's conservative policies.

"My experiences in the Japan-China friendship group proved that political slogans are not enough. What really works are true stories. The characters in my books are real Chinese people and through them, Japanese people will understand Chinese people's real nature and then they will say no to so-called 'China threats', " said Nakajima, who ended up changing his given name to Shika, meaning "miss China" in Japanese.

Nakajima expressed his confusion and anxiety over the souring ties between Japan and China, describing the situation as running against what the two neighbors had anticipated when they normalized their ties in the 1970s. "This year marks the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II, and my book right now has its realistic significance," he said.

"I myself am a surviving victim of the war and to some extent I was also a perpetrator at the same time. Japanese people are kind- hearted, but they need to have their own opinion, or they may become followers of militarism," Nakajima said, referring to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's attempts to ram the controversial security bills through parliament and deny Japan's wartime atrocities.

The second print of 1,000 copies of Nakajima's book was published and a renowned Chinese publisher will issue the Chinese- language version in China. Nakajima said he has fulfilled the task Liang assigned to him on boosting Japan-China friendship.

"Japan is my motherland, but China is my hometown," Nakajima concluded in fluent Chinese with a strong Heilongjiang accent.

 

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