WWII Prosecutor's Diaries Reveal Effort to Document Japanese Atrocities in China
Auf einen Blick
- Newly revealed diaries from US prosecutor David Nelson Sutton detail the effort to document Japanese wartime atrocities in China during the Tokyo Trial.
- The archives, donated to the Memorial Hall of the Victims in the Nanking Massacre by Japanese Invaders, highlight the prosecutorial team's sacrifice and pursuit of justice.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
Newly revealed diaries from US prosecutor David Nelson Sutton, who served at the Tokyo Trial, offer insights into the documentation of Japanese wartime atrocities in China. The archives were donated to a memorial hall in Nanjing and publicly debuted at a symposium.
A US prosecutor’s newly revealed diaries from World War II have laid bare the gruelling effort to document Japanese wartime atrocities in China and the unlikely bond forged between him and the people he helped.
The diaries belonged to David Nelson Sutton, an American assistant prosecutor at the Tokyo Trial, or the International Military Tribunal for the Far East – a landmark international judicial effort.
The tribunal drew upon a vast “evidence wall” comprising nearly 50,000 pages of trial records to dismantle the legal foundations of Japanese militarism and establish the historical record of war crimes in the region.
Six volumes of Sutton’s diaries and a report on the Nanking massacre were donated to the Memorial Hall of the Victims in the Nanking Massacre by Japanese Invaders. They made their public debut on April 29 at a symposium commemorating the 80th anniversary of the Tokyo Trial’s opening on May 3, 1946.
Yang Xiaming, a researcher at the Institute for National Memory and International Peace who has spent 20 years tracking Sutton’s legacy, hailed the archives’ historical significance and Sutton’s pursuit of justice for a country not his own.
“When you read these diaries, you understand the efficiency and the enormous personal sacrifice of the prosecutorial team,” Yang said at the event in Nanjing.
Offene Fragen
- What specific atrocities are detailed in Sutton's diaries?
- What was the nature of the bond between Sutton and the Chinese people?
- How extensive was the prosecutorial team's personal sacrifice?
- What is the current status of the archives and their accessibility?



