Located in the campus of Kyushu University, Japan, this museum of medical history shows the development history of Kyushu University School of Medicine in the past 100 years.
Japan's Yonhap News Agency reported that the museum has 63 exhibits, including medical records and medical devices. What makes people feel heavy is that two of the exhibits are the evidence that professors of Kyushu University Medical College dissected eight American pilots alive during World War II.
1945, an American B29 bomber was shot down over Fukuoka, Japan, and many American pilots were captured. At that time, how many American pilots were captured by the Japanese army became a historical mystery, but what is certain is that eight of them were professors of vivisection at the Faculty of Medicine of Kyushu University.
In the so-called medical experiment, several professors from Kyushu University School of Medicine injected diluted seawater into these American pilots, took out their lungs and other organs, observed how long they could survive, and explained the "precautions" and "points" to the students. In the end, all eight American pilots were killed.
American pilots mistakenly thought it was "cured"
A Japanese professor who participated in the anatomy of American pilots later recalled that "these (American) war criminals saw us wearing white coats and realized that we were doctors", thinking that they were going to treat them, they let down their guard and did not struggle. "They never dreamed that they would be dissected alive."