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Rape of Nanking Author Suicide Victim

Iris Chang, world-renowned Chinese-American author of The Rape of Nanking, which exposed the brutal atrocities by Japanese invading army in China during China's War against Japan, took her own life, US police said on Thursday.

Chang, 36, was found dead on Tuesday in a car south of San Francisco in what police determined as suicide, said Terrance Helm of the Santa Clara County Sheriff's Department. She died from a single bullet to the head.

Police said Chang's husband reported her missing on Monday and police identified the body on Tuesday morning.

"Our detectives determined it was a suicide," Helm said.

Her agent, Susan Rabiner, said Chang had suffered from " classical clinical depression" and had been hospitalized earlier this year. She said Chang left a note to her family asking that she be remembered as she was before her illness.

"I'm just shocked," said retired San Francisco Superior Court Judge Lillian Sing, who was helping Chang with a documentary on aging US military veterans who had suffered as POWs in Japanese captivity during World War II. "She was a real woman warrior trying to fight injustice."

Born in Princeton of New Jersey to a Chinese immigrant family, Chang grew up in Illinois and received a bachelor's degree in journalism from the University of Illinois. She worked briefly as a reporter for the Chicago Tribune and Associated Press before entering a master's program at Johns Hopkins University in 1990.

She later became a historian full time. She lived in Sunnyvale, California with her husband and young son.

Chang rose to inter-national fame in 1997 when she published the book The Rape of Nanking, the Forgotten Holocaust of World War II, which is a graphic account of the killing spree in then China's capital Nanking by invading Japanese Army in 1937.

The book, rejected by Japanese publishing houses, was a result of two years of investigation by Chang in China. She exposed that tens of thousands of Chinese civilians were slaughtered by Japanese soldiers, and an estimated 20,000-80,000 Chinese women were raped.

"Many soldiers went beyond rape to disembowel women, slice off their breasts, nail them alive to walls. Fathers were forced to rape their daughters and sons their mothers as other family members watched," she wrote.

"Not only did live burials, castration, the carving of organs and the roasting of people become routine, but more diabolical tortures were practiced," she wrote.

Her most recent book was The Chinese in America: A Narrative History published last year. It records the history of the hard struggle by Chinese immigrants in the United States in the past 150 years.

The book was named one of the best books of the year by The San Francisco Chronicle. And Chang's first book, Thread of the Silkworm, told the story of the Chinese scientist who guided the development of China's Silkworm missile.

(China Daily November 13, 2004)

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