First of all, let's talk about national treasures. The Japanese plundered 1879 boxes of national treasures, cultural relics, antiques and treasures from China, totaling more than 3.6 million pieces. I feel that Japanese soldiers are shameless, and it is sad that a large number of national treasures are stranded overseas. When Japan invaded China, capturing a city was not only a military occupation, but also a large-scale looting and even a massacre. They will collect all kinds of looted cultural relics and antiques, turn them over, and a large number of cultural relics will flow from China to Japan. The author thinks that Japanese non-governmental organizations can ask the government to return China's cultural relics today, which shows that China is really strong. Only when a country is strong, people from other countries will care about you out of respect, especially for the Japanese who admire the strong, while a weak country can only be plundered. The author concludes that as China becomes more and more powerful, more countries will demand the return of those treasures belonging to China.
In addition to cultural relics and antiques, Japan also robbed our country of these things: gold, coal and copper mines. The following is a detailed explanation:
1, Japan plundered a lot of gold and silver in China: when Japan invaded a place, it plundered all the gold in these places and put it in its own pocket. It also issued currency, and in disguise, it exchanged a folded piece of paper for silver coins. They even dug up the victim's gold false teeth and took them away. This shows the greed of the Japanese.
2. Japan snatched a lot of coal from China: Japan knew it lacked coal resources, so it plundered China's coal resources, and even shamelessly built a coal train, which transported domestic coal to the port train and then sent it back to Japan.
3. Japan plundered a large number of copper resources in China: Japan is an island country with few products, so Japan plundered various minerals in China, including copper mines rich in mineral resources in China. In order to facilitate transportation, Japan established a large number of copper smelters in China, especially in Manchuria, and refined copper ore into copper ingots, which were finally transported back to Japan by cargo ships.