Chapter 143 51 War and Peace
December 7, 1941, during World War II. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; At this time, the U.S. fleet at Pearl Harbor in the Pacific Ocean, which was originally a neutral country, was attacked by Japan, 8 battleships, 3 cruisers, and 3 destroyers were sunk, 188 U.S. warplanes were destroyed, more than 2,000 people were killed, and more than 1,000 people were injured. In the same year, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared the United States at war, and the sneak attack also became a turning point in the victory of World War II.
At that time, Yu Wei was sent back to Germany during World War II for some reason, and for some reason she happened to be in Pearl Harbor during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, so she became an eyewitness to the sneak attack. The most important person in her life, her good friend husband, was one of the pilots involved in the U.S. air raid on Japan after Pearl Harbor.
Decades had passed since Pearl Harbor, and the veterans who had survived Pearl Harbor had all died, and she was the only person in the world who witnessed the attack.
At this time, Pearl Harbor had already become a tourist hotspot, and people from all over the world visited it.
Yuwei stood on the beach, threw the yellow chrysanthemum in her hand into the sea, watched the chrysanthemum gradually disappear and disappear, remembered the past, and sighed lightly. All the people I knew at the time were gone, Jack, Jason, Edward, and Pingjun.
Since returning to this era, marrying Andrew, and having children, Yuwei will take her children to Pearl Harbor and Nanjing every year to pay tribute to the victims of that war, and tell them about the atrocities committed by the Japanese fascists in China. This is not to cultivate their hatred, but to remind them of the cruelty of war and the hard-won peace that is built on the blood of countless people.
Looking back, she will never forget the shame she suffered when she was framed by the Japanese Mitsuya Tajiri and Mikio Kikuchi, and was mistaken by her compatriots for the daughter of a traitor, Lin Jingru. was humiliated by Liu Yanxin and Cen Yixu, who were like madmen. Whenever I get up, the hatred in my heart cannot be contained. hatred of the viciousness of the Japanese, and hatred of the stupidity of Liu Cen and the others. Although these four people have been dead for many years, she still can't let go. Liu Yanxin's stupid behavior back then made her a pawn of the Japanese, and she later died in the hands of Lin Zhengdao, which has to be said to be a kind of reincarnation. As for Mikio Kikuchi and Mitsuya Tajiri, they also got the end they deserved because of her counterattack, see Dream Break Rhine for details. Rao is like this, whenever he recalls that experience, his feelings are still difficult to calm down.
Compared with the atrocities of the Japanese, Yuwei rarely told her children about the crimes committed by the Germans in Auschwitz, although she had also witnessed and even experienced the massacre in Auschwitz, but that qiē was related to Andrew's past life, she could not tell her children, that was one of the crimes your father had committed and her children still have German blood, besides, the hatred between Chinese and Germans is far less profound than with the Japanese. Even during the war, Hitler sent military advisers and supplied weapons to the Chinese government, which was not terminated until the German-Japanese alliance was established. Not to mention that Mr. Johann Rabe, who had saved more than 200,000 people in Nanjing, was also German.
Moreover, compared to the despicable acts of the Japanese government that has been denying the Nanjing Massacre and the survival of comfort women since the end of the war. After the war, the German government actively compensated the victims, arresting fascist members who committed crimes during the war. It was the German Chancellor's kneeling in front of the Jewish monument that brought Germany back on its feet, and she admired them for that. Therefore, she never told her children about the Nazi massacres in Germany, but Andrew often told them about the past and warned them to cherish the hard-won peace
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