731部队罪证遗址
4A地址:黑龙江·哈尔滨 哈尔滨市平房区新疆大街47号(近青年大街)
开放时间: 周二-周日9:00-16:30(15:30停止入馆),周一闭馆(法定节假日除外)。
门票信息:免费开放,需领票参观。
景点印象
日本当年侵华可是有铁证的,731部队在那时对我国人民进行侵略手段极其残忍,我们要铭记着历史,不能忘记屈辱。印象很深的是那些图文并茂的图片,生物科学有时候挺可怕的,看到老百姓痛苦的表情,觉得他们太没有人性了,同样是人类为啥要互相残害。
日本的罪行,几世代人都不能忘记的。看了731部队罪证遗址,更加痛恨小日本。那一副副图片,告诉我们,以前小日本在中国所犯下惨为人道的历史。记住历史,奋发图强,时刻不住这段这仇恨。
只是单独的作为一个参观来看的话还可以,参观形势比较单一,只有图片文字介绍和几个小的影像资料,还有感应式的随身声音介绍。个人认为不能给我一一个全方位的印象。参观以后比较容易忘记。总是觉得这种具有历史教育意义的遗址应该让人参观后过目不忘。
虽然地方不大 但是还是值得一去的他是限时间的 限人数的 一定要挑好时间不然真的不能进去 管理很严格的那天看完之后出去 天下起了毛毛细雨 顿时心情也变得更加沉重铭记历史 好好生活~
昨天,我参观了哈尔滨的731博物馆。以前这里是那些日本侵越者用中国人来做实验的地方。他们要么把受害者暴露于各种疾病,有毒气体中使其受到感染死亡,要么就用那些骇人听闻的残虐手段把他们折磨至死。由于整个过程很复杂,所以日军修建了这些房屋。不过目前你还看不到这些建筑。因为除了行政大楼及一些后院的建筑物以外,那些建筑物基本上都被摧毁了。若你想要前往那儿,可搭乘出租车,并向司机展示3个数字(731)或者搭乘一块五毛钱的343公交车,然后把这几个数字也给售票员看一看 。这里门票的价格为20元(2.5美元),你还可在这儿观看一部纪录片。虽然这里禁止任何人拍照,但如果你正好站在监视器下(没有被他们的监视器拍到),快速按下你相机的快门,你还是能拍到些相片的。在参观完这个博物馆之后,我真是深有感触啊,心情复杂得难以言表了。
Unfortunately there are no English captions on the pics/displays and no English audio tour (although I had read that there were in old travel guides). There were Chinese and Korean audio tours. While the pics are interesting, most are of people - like portraits - or general things like armies/military meetings, etc. There are very few pics/displays that can be identified without help from captions. What there is is interesting (a 3D model of one kind of chemical warfare experiment the Japanese would do and one horrible re-enactment video of the frostbite-curing experiements). But I would have slightly misinterpreted what these were showing if not for my mom, who was listening to the Korean audio guide. Given the difficulty in understanding I might not suggest English-only-speaking people go... which is too bad bc I was so interested in this and looked forward to learning more details.The place is also pretty far from town - if you do want to go make sure to hire a taxi and agree to have him wait for you to take you back. It was 200RMB roundtrip for us although he argued once we got back. The whole journey probably took around 3 hours. Don't forget to bring your passport - our driver took them all and got our tickets for us.
It takes about 45 minutes to get there by taxi. We paid a taxi driver to wait for us as it gave us peace of mind in getting back. The museum was interesting although but it has limited English signage. The staff were friendly and its free to get in (you just need your passport). I learnt about 731 at high school (many years ago!) and felt that I had to go there. The main building certainly has a very dark feel to it and I suggest doing some research about its history as there is no audio guide in English available (when I was there anyway). It is definitely part of suburbia now as there is a primary school directly next to it. I wouldn't put it on my 'must do' list but if you have the time and like WW2 history its worth the trip out there.
a far out from the city center... this musuem is best to reach by taxi if you are not adventureous to go by bus... this musuem covers the brutal experiments conducted by the japanese during their occupation period on frostbite test, germs etc on chinese people... before entering into the museum proper, you will go through an asileway of deceased who died from this place... worth a visit but unfortunately, the building and exhibits are partial during this time of visit and rennovation seems to be underway...
We spent 40 minutes getting to this museum only to find that it is partially open. Most of it is in chinese and very little English. We heard that in September of 2015 it will be fully open. Was slightly informative but not enough was in english. Lots of potential but still lacking for english speakers. Not worth the taxi ride to get there unfortunately.
Happened to be in Harbin on business, had visited the city many times and had no idea this place even existed, it was an absolute eye opener, we are all very aware of the holocaust in Europe and are not so aware of what was happening in China during WW2. An absolute education and a must visit if you are in the area. It explains a lot about current relationships in the Far East.
In the last 4 years there have been many improvements to this site. More rooms are open and they are doing excavations out the back. There are now audio guides ( not an improvement on the personal guided toured we had last time) and videos showing the types of experiments carried out. 731 is a must for all and a reminder of the worst of human nature.
As a student of History I wonder how the free world would punish and condem the Axis powers of war crime and ignore what the Japanese did to the people of China. I now know that the United States Government ignored what took place in China.What was done here was used to faclitate my own governments advance in inhuman treatment of our fellow humans in the world. We as Americans are as guilty as those that built and used the concertration camps. I am ashamed.
Closed on the day we visited, the guard at the gate said it was because the people who work inside didn't turn up to work ... that's a pretty poor reason to shut the whole museum down for the day ...
When you arrive here it immediately feels like a haunted building in the same way that concentration camps have an air of death around them. I had heard about the atrocities commited here mainly from the infamous exploitation movie 'Men Behind the Sun', and to my surprise they were playing extremely graphic clips from the film, showing various experiments. I found this quite innapropriate, especially as there were children present. The audio guide and the displays would have been sufficient and your imagination can do the rest. A shlocky b-movie cheapened the experience. The 15 yuan audio guide is probably worthwhile. At first it seemed to just be an aural version of the english information boards, but as you go round the displays become few and far between and the audio guide gives you much more detail. Previous reviews mention the anti-Japan bias. Maybe they've toned it down since. I didn't find it went overboard, and there was a room dedicated to Japanese members of unit 731 who later repented, and this seemed to point towards forgiveness, not just bitterness. Definitely worth a visit considering it's free. Get the 338 bus (as well as leaving from Kunlun hotel in the centre, there's a stop somewhere on Hexing road for those staying towards the south of Harbin) or the 343 (goes down Xuefu road)
I wasn't interested in visiting this place and after visiting it was at loss for words. It is a perfect example of what monsters can do and what we have all forgotten and forgiven. While standing there at the gates after I had exited this house of horrors, I couldn't stop wondering what must have gone through every one of those victims entering this place knowing that this is going to be the last they are ever going to see the outside world. It's funny when I read some of the comments here stating there should have been a more un-biased approach. Don't miss this place.