Tianshui Association

Tianshui Association (Japanese: 天水会, pronounced in Japanese "Tensui Kai" and in Chinese "Tianshui Hui") is a mutual assistance association in Japan of the 300 Japanese railway engineers who worked under forced labor for the construction of the Tianshui-Lanzhou Railway, Gansu Province, China.

The present-day Tianshui Railway Station (2009)

General

China Railway Corporation in 1950 restarted the construction of the Tianshui-Lanzhou Railway (354 km), now part of Longhai Railway between Lianyungang and Lanzhou, and gathered 300 Japanese former South Manchuria Railway engineers and others with their families in Tianshui, Gansu Province, to work under forced labor for this project. The railway was completed in 1952 and those Japanese workers, who were repatriated to Japan in 1953, formed Tianshui Association, a mutual assistance association.[1][2]

gollark: Again, *Chrome can read your browser history*.
gollark: ................
gollark: > i can, sure, but i'm not being hunted downYou can reduce it *with not much effort*. Do you just not *care* about being spied on?
gollark: Most people use Chrome, which means Chrome can randomly add "features" and stuff with few checks on their behavior. If you use a different browser, you make it slightly less likely.
gollark: You can REDUCE it.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.