TheMuseumofChineseinAmerica(MOCA)istounveiltwogroundbreakingexhibitionsnextmonthinNewYorkCityonChinesemedicineandpracticesinAmericathroughhistoricalmedicalartif
TheMuseumofChineseinAmerica(MOCA)istounveiltwogroundbreakingexhibitionsinNewYorkCitynextmonthonChinesemedicineandpracticesinAmericathroughhistoricalmedicalartif
It remains a crowning shame to mankind that the 107 survivors of the appalling carnage conducted by Tokyo in 1937 in the eastern Chinese city of Nanjing may never live to get their deserved official apology from the island country, even 79 years after it was defeated in World War II.
The old store keeper was standing behind a glass case in his dusty shop in the southern Kandahar province and bargaining enthusiastically with a customer over the price of a rare and expensive artifact.
As Japan and South Korea agreed to settle the long-standing "comfort women" issue between the two sides, more sincerity and actions are needed from Tokyo to better resolve the sensitive historical matter.
As China marks the 78th anniversary of the Lugou Bridge Incident which marked the start of the Chinese People's War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression, hundreds of renowned Japanese scholars gathered in Tokyo, criticizing Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's historical revisionism.
British ambassador to Japan Tim Hitchens urged the country to admit historical mistakes and create better environment for improving ties with neighboring countries, local media reported on Monday.