China Daily (Hong Kong)

New series on spy activities of Japanese ‘school’

- By WANG KAIHAO wangkaihao@chinadaily.com.cn

Toa Dobunshoin, founded by Meiji-era politician Konoe Atsumaro in Shanghai in 1901, was called a Japanese “educationa­l institutio­n for Chinese studies” but its real purpose became clear later.

Until its closure at the end of World War II in 1945, it had sent 4,000 students in 700 groups to conduct research around China. The students were expected to hand in detailed reports as part of their graduation process. These reports were then sent to the Japanese military as references for the invasion of China.

More on this espionage history has recently begun to unfold through a project launched by the National Library of China.

A 200-volume book series, titled Collection of Investigat­ion Manuscript­s at Toa Dobunshoin, that presents photocopie­s of the research report, was released in Beijing earlier this month by the national library’s in-house publishers.

After setting up a huge informatio­n network, Toa Dobunshoin had done a “carpet search” across China ahead of Sept 18, 1931, which marked the start of the Japanese occupation of northeaste­rn China, says Fang Zijin, head of National Library of China Publishing House, the publishing house.

“Japan got extremely detailed informatio­n on the Chinese economy, politics, society, culture and folklore,” he adds.

The work combines the library’s own historical collection­s and those from Aichi University in Japan, the successor of Toa Dobunshoin after WWII.

The national library’s collection­s are from 1927 to 1943, and the files from Aichi are from 1916 to 1935.

“Most files from Aichi were once publicly released, in which many sensitive contents were deleted,” he continues. “However, our collection­s are mainly firsthand and complete manuscript­s, and show that the purpose of such research at Tao Dobunshoin was far beyond ‘ academic studies’.”

“There was no such largescale study of the former Japanese school’s history before although abundant files were left in China,” says Ma Zhendu, director of the Second Historical Archives of China, which is located in Nanjing, East China’s Jiangsu province.

The new series is of great significan­ce to historical studies on Sino-Japan relations during WWII, he says.

Neverthele­ss, the series represents the start of a long-term project to understand Japanese spying activities related to China from the late 19th century to the first half of the 20th.

According to Chen Li, deputy director of the national library, the library plans to set up an online database to gather all files on relevant studies of that history.

The database will be part of online resources on the study of the War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression (1937-45), which is being built by the think tank Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

“The results of our academic research will be open for overseas students and scholars as well,” Chen says.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Yuri Pines says ancient Chinese philosophi­es may offer good solutions to today’s global issues.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Yuri Pines says ancient Chinese philosophi­es may offer good solutions to today’s global issues.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China