Wall Street Journalさんのインスタグラム写真 - (Wall Street JournalInstagram)「Thirty years after the massacre at #TiananmenSquare, survivors like Rose Tang still often think back to the chaos of 1989.⠀ ⠀ Tang, 50, who has lived in Brooklyn for the past decade, still has her diary recounting the attack, written in English in case police seized it.⠀ ⠀ "I fell down and was beaten by a soldier," she wrote. "I felt choked, nearly dying. Lucky enough, I went atop a tank, then fled away, with shoes lost, glasses broken."⠀ ⠀ Liu Jan, who was a student in 1989, spent every day for weeks photographing the protests and scenes around him. After the crackdown, as he roamed streets littered with the bloodied dead, he stopped photographing, too horrified to capture what he saw. ⠀ ⠀ "I wanted to forget what happened," said Liu, 50. "It would be inconvenient to remember."⠀ ⠀ For three decades, he told no one about the nearly 2,000 images he had taken. But in 2016 he moved to the U.S. with his daughter, then 15, and last year he broached the topic of Tiananmen with her. He was astonished to find that she knew nothing about what occurred, pushing him to share his photos publicly for the first time. ⠀ ⠀ "We don't have the ability to change things," Liu said. "But we need to let young people understand what happened."⠀ ⠀ Read more at the link in our bio.⠀ ⠀ 📷: @dorothypunk and @timothy_archibald for @wsjphotos⠀ Additional photos courtesy of Rose Tang and Liu Jian」6月5日 4時31分 - wsj

Wall Street Journalのインスタグラム(wsj) - 6月5日 04時31分


Thirty years after the massacre at #TiananmenSquare, survivors like Rose Tang still often think back to the chaos of 1989.⠀

Tang, 50, who has lived in Brooklyn for the past decade, still has her diary recounting the attack, written in English in case police seized it.⠀

"I fell down and was beaten by a soldier," she wrote. "I felt choked, nearly dying. Lucky enough, I went atop a tank, then fled away, with shoes lost, glasses broken."⠀

Liu Jan, who was a student in 1989, spent every day for weeks photographing the protests and scenes around him. After the crackdown, as he roamed streets littered with the bloodied dead, he stopped photographing, too horrified to capture what he saw. ⠀

"I wanted to forget what happened," said Liu, 50. "It would be inconvenient to remember."⠀

For three decades, he told no one about the nearly 2,000 images he had taken. But in 2016 he moved to the U.S. with his daughter, then 15, and last year he broached the topic of Tiananmen with her. He was astonished to find that she knew nothing about what occurred, pushing him to share his photos publicly for the first time. ⠀

"We don't have the ability to change things," Liu said. "But we need to let young people understand what happened."⠀

Read more at the link in our bio.⠀

📷: @dorothypunk and @timothy_archibald for @wsjphotos
Additional photos courtesy of Rose Tang and Liu Jian


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