Cen Jingrong, male, born in October 1931, is a member of the first group of De'an County Horticultural Farm (formerly known as the Cen family of the Turtle Society), works as a farmer, and has never studied.
Oral time: the morning of October 16, 2006
Oral location: Cen Jingrong's home in a group of De'an County Horticultural Farm
Interviewers: Zhu Zhongliang, Zhang Lihui, Pan Jinlong
* Twenty-seven years later, in 1938, the Japanese devils came to us, and I was only 8 years old. At that time, the Japanese devils used the "three-light policy" (robbing, burning, and killing), and they killed at least 40 people in our village alone. I remember that at that time, as long as it was a house that the Japanese devils didn't like, they would burn it down.
The Japanese devils stayed here for a total of eight years, during which time they were arrested and locked up when they saw the flat-headed ones. Once, I saw them catch two flat-headed ones, give them a little rice, a top jar, two pairs of chopsticks, and a quilt, and send special guards to guard them, and even ask people to stand guard at night, but they still escaped.
The Japanese devils arrested all the people in the neighborhood and locked them in an oil press, where there were 30 or 40 people, and I was in it, but then I ran away, and the Japanese began to wash the guns the day after I escaped, and on the third day they began to kill people.
At that time, there was a child who had just been able to walk, and he was thrown into the fire by the Japanese devils, and the child's mother ran to grab it, and the Japanese devils hacked the child's mother to death. The Japanese women are generally seven or eight or ten **one, and they will be killed when they are finished. When they catch an elderly woman, they poke her lower body (reproductive organs) with sharpened sweet potatoes for fun.
After killing Chinese civilians, the devils poured gasoline on them and burned them.
This article is excerpted from this article** from: "Evidence of Crime: The Record of Invasion of China in the Lens of the Japanese Army" edited by Li Ronghui; Ren Yi deputy editor-in-chief, this article ** comes from the Internet. ** and the copyright of the quoted article belongs to the original author.
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