Memorial Museum for Soldiers, Detainees in Siberia, and Postwar Repatriates

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Shinjuku City, Japan

heiwakinen.jp
War museum· Tourist attraction

Memorial Museum for Soldiers, Detainees in Siberia, and Postwar Repatriates Reviews | Rating 4,3 out of 5 stars (5 reviews)

Memorial Museum for Soldiers, Detainees in Siberia, and Postwar Repatriates is located in Shinjuku City, Japan on Nishishinjuku, 2 Chome−6−1, 新宿住友ビル33階. Memorial Museum for Soldiers, Detainees in Siberia, and Postwar Repatriates is rated 4.3 out of 5 in the category war museum in Japan.

Address

Nishishinjuku, 2 Chome−6−1, 新宿住友ビル33階

Phone

+81353238709

Open hours

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T

Tahir Cheeko

Staff is English friendly, entrance is 100 percent free . If you dont understand english,they will also provide you an audio note whoch u can use for free of cost with english as well as japanese explaination lf each desk . I was not expecting it to be free, but it is,A must try if u are foreigner

A

Alfredo Telles Mosquera

Good. With english translation.

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nuX R

The memorial museum for soldiers are in the Shinjuku sumitomo building . Go to Bank4 32-26 (picture). Then with the lift to 33F (picture). The museum are right from the lift. The museum is very well built. Also, if much has not been written in English, the humederte of exhibits will explain themselves. You also used the google photo translater. On display are photos, documents, tools, uniforms and much more. Video films show the cruel of war, imprisonment and escapism. children ( in this war was the youngest boys 16) have to shoot at other children, mothers lose their family. nobody wins a war

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Mike Lee

A one sided view museum focusing on the suffering of the Japanese. There is no mentioning on the suffering of the people being invaded by them. In fact, they still use the word \advance\ instead of \invade\ to describe their invasion to neighbouring countries. Whereas in the pamphlet they give away, they use 一\invade\ to describe the German's invasion to France. Without the complete truth, this museum will post a wrong message to their future generations. They should learn from the German on how to face the truth, so that the new generations will never start any war again.

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Jake Rigby

Brilliant muesuem and it's free. Really thought provoking and made me realise a whole new aspect of Japanese history and the poor people that suffered through this. I would highly recommend.