The opening ceremony for an exhibition on the Sino-Japanese War was held yesterday at the Taipei City Archives in Taipei's Zhongshan Hall.
The exhibition, which runs until July 20, features 80 photographs taken in the period starting with the signing of the Treaty of Shimonoseki in 1895 -- which ceded Taiwan to Japan -- through to the outbreak of hostilities between China and Japan outside Beijing (then known as Peiping) near the Marco Polo Bridge on July 7, 1937.
The organizer said the exhibition is being held to cherish memories and show respect to those "sacrificed Chinese heroes."
Several participants in the conflict attended the launch, including retired General Ho Chih-hao (
"The exhibition is not being held to celebrate victory in the War," Taipei Mayor Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) said. "Mistakes can be forgiven, but we cannot forget our history."
Ma said that there was no need to promote anti-Japanese sentiment, but many people could never leave behind the arduous history that their elders had endured.
"We shouldn't look at this event simply as a historical memory of a nation being aggressed against by another country," said Liao Hsien-hao (
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