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)

After the end of the Second Sino-Japanese War, around 930 Japanese former South Manchuria Railway engineers and their family members were not repatriated to Japan and instead sent to Tianshui, Gansu Province by the Republic of China government, to aide construction of the Tianshui-Lanzhou section (354 km) of the Longhai Railway. The railway was completed under the PRC government in 1952 and those Japanese workers, who were repatriated to Japan in 1953, formed the Tianshui Association, a mutual assistance association.[1][2] The association retains friendly ties with Tianshui and in 1999 donated 1000 cherry blossom trees, which were used to build the Sino-Japanese friendship park in Tianshui.[3] While many of the first-generation workers have reached old age, the association remains active with descendants of the railway engineers.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Tianshui Association: China's Tianshui-Lanzhou Railway and Our Recent Activities (in Japanese)
  2. ^ "修建天兰铁路的日本技工:食物供应上受特殊照顾". chinanews.com. 16 April 2010. Archived from the original on 2014-12-04.
  3. ^ "中日友好草根团体之天水会" [Tianshui Association, a grassroots group for Sino-Japanese friendship]. www.keguanjp.com. Retrieved 2024-02-03.
  4. ^ "しわに刻んだ67年 終戦後の中国、鉄路つないだ日本人:朝日新聞デジタル". 朝日新聞デジタル (in Japanese). 2019-11-11. Retrieved 2024-02-03.