Dubai Telegraph - Frenchman's mislabelled war photos donation sparks China controversy

EUR -
AED 3.966251
AFN 77.966492
ALL 99.055789
AMD 420.080645
ANG 1.921802
AOA 988.147509
ARS 1148.637164
AUD 1.704371
AWG 1.946597
AZN 1.830971
BAM 1.952948
BBD 2.152946
BDT 129.560779
BGN 1.955821
BHD 0.407099
BIF 3158.601543
BMD 1.079943
BND 1.425924
BOB 7.368239
BRL 6.241965
BSD 1.066348
BTN 92.89404
BWP 14.667646
BYN 3.48962
BYR 21166.878155
BZD 2.141882
CAD 1.549318
CDF 3105.915343
CHF 0.958822
CLF 0.026442
CLP 1014.6816
CNY 7.83077
CNH 7.825681
COP 4441.804584
CRC 535.615264
CUC 1.079943
CUP 28.618483
CVE 110.102668
CZK 25.047122
DJF 189.881802
DKK 7.459486
DOP 66.47261
DZD 144.402038
EGP 54.787221
ERN 16.199141
ETB 138.829984
FJD 2.475283
FKP 0.839819
GBP 0.837037
GEL 3.002414
GGP 0.839819
GHS 16.529858
GIP 0.839819
GMD 77.215575
GNF 9219.535035
GTQ 8.224873
GYD 223.094175
HKD 8.395637
HNL 27.264307
HRK 7.528715
HTG 140.006172
HUF 399.297867
IDR 17661.545938
ILS 3.903183
IMP 0.839819
INR 94.047357
IQD 1396.853453
IRR 45479.090026
ISK 146.904486
JEP 0.839819
JMD 167.426252
JOD 0.766108
JPY 159.761871
KES 139.529336
KGS 94.44077
KHR 4276.77365
KMF 498.93368
KPW 971.880354
KRW 1562.039829
KWD 0.332817
KYD 0.888598
KZT 529.294524
LAK 23125.119113
LBP 95542.504242
LKR 314.948565
LRD 213.265567
LSL 19.642422
LTL 3.188791
LVL 0.653246
LYD 5.182407
MAD 10.46891
MDL 19.72728
MGA 4971.76185
MKD 61.528036
MMK 2266.560613
MNT 3748.19628
MOP 8.536194
MRU 42.31101
MUR 48.86754
MVR 16.633889
MWK 1849.008118
MXN 22.076881
MYR 4.777131
MZN 69.018753
NAD 19.642422
NGN 1626.123989
NIO 39.242868
NOK 11.742142
NPR 148.633611
NZD 1.882567
OMR 0.415783
PAB 1.066343
PEN 3.913484
PGK 4.35466
PHP 61.95362
PKR 298.490342
PLN 4.168862
PYG 8443.629139
QAR 3.886969
RON 4.976272
RSD 117.126757
RUB 96.870381
RWF 1528.574621
SAR 4.051021
SBD 9.118472
SCR 15.696113
SDG 649.045562
SEK 10.952277
SGD 1.439072
SHP 0.848665
SLE 24.676631
SLL 22645.865858
SOS 609.412785
SRD 38.526989
STD 22352.634799
SVC 9.33033
SYP 14041.268625
SZL 19.628424
THB 36.424852
TJS 11.622664
TMT 3.7798
TND 3.329391
TOP 2.529337
TRY 39.363589
TTD 7.238395
TWD 35.494449
TZS 2837.545824
UAH 44.102893
UGX 3915.281801
USD 1.079943
UYU 45.433015
UZS 13755.846146
VES 69.644677
VND 27533.140744
VUV 134.758576
WST 3.074575
XAF 655.003412
XAG 0.033254
XAU 0.000372
XCD 2.918599
XDR 0.814614
XOF 654.997356
XPF 119.331742
YER 266.5841
ZAR 19.800934
ZMK 9720.784726
ZMW 30.576485
ZWL 347.741129
  • RBGPF

    66.6700

    66.67

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    10.67

    +0.37%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    23.3

    -0.04%

  • RELX

    -0.4400

    48.54

    -0.91%

  • NGG

    -1.4800

    60.89

    -2.43%

  • GSK

    0.3800

    38.81

    +0.98%

  • RIO

    1.5600

    63.75

    +2.45%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    9.03

    +1.66%

  • BTI

    0.0700

    39.68

    +0.18%

  • BP

    0.4400

    31.88

    +1.38%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    23.505

    +0.11%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    12.88

    +0.16%

  • BCC

    2.4500

    100.32

    +2.44%

  • AZN

    0.7100

    77.96

    +0.91%

  • SCS

    -0.1900

    11.43

    -1.66%

  • BCE

    0.1000

    23.71

    +0.42%

Frenchman's mislabelled war photos donation sparks China controversy
Frenchman's mislabelled war photos donation sparks China controversy / Photo: Mark RALSTON - AFP/File

Frenchman's mislabelled war photos donation sparks China controversy

A Frenchman's donation of vintage conflict photographs to China offers insight into the 1930-1940s Sino-Japanese War -- even if some images are not the unique family heirlooms he believed them to be.

Text size:

Marcus Detrez landed in Beijing last month with a leather briefcase that he said contained hundreds of his grandfather's pictures from the conflict, which ended in 1945 after widespread atrocities in China.

State-run media outlets such as China Daily and CCTV reported that the 26-year-old found the yellowed images while rummaging through the garage of his family home in 2021.

"All of them were taken by my grandfather Roger-Pierre Laurens in Shanghai," says text over a video featuring Detrez and his companions on Douyin, China's version of TikTok.

Detrez's claims spread quickly, racking up tens of thousands of shares on Douyin ahead of the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II later this year.

However, an AFP digital investigation found many of the pictures were taken by other people.

Two photos have been attributed to the Associated Press, while some digital copies of the images were published years ago by Chinese media outlets.

Jamie Carstairs, former manager of the Historical Photographs of China (HPC) project at Britain's University of Bristol, said that Detrez should be "congratulated for his kind donation" but that "care should be taken".

"It is not correct to say that the photos were purportedly taken by Roger-Pierre Laurens," Carstairs said. "Some of them might have been, but others were not."

- 'Return the truth' -

Japan's early 20th-century imperial ambitions resulted in military occupations across large parts of Asia, including China.

After invading in the 1930s, Japanese soldiers committed atrocities like the 1937 Nanjing Massacre, a six-week spree of mass murder, rape and looting that killed tens if not hundreds of thousands of the city's inhabitants.

Detrez said in a May 2024 Douyin video that his grandfather "came to Shanghai in 1930 as an entrepreneur" and "took these photos fearlessly" despite two of his sons being killed by the Japanese.

He later told a Beijing broadcaster he wanted to "return the truth to the Chinese".

After state broadcaster CGTN reported Detrez "expressed an intention to donate them to Chinese institutions", a Shanghai Sino-Japanese War memorial hall told CCTV that his photos had been received and were "pending professional appraisal".

- 'Duplicate prints' -

However, AFP found several inconsistencies.

A photo featuring a Japanese naval parade through a Shanghai street traces back to online archives from the US Naval History and Heritage Command, which told AFP it was taken by a chief warrant officer in 1937.

Carstairs said the HPC database, which includes a large collection of original materials and digitised versions of historic images, indicates a few of the pictures appear in an album from Chinese photographer Ah Fong, who was active in the 1930s.

Most of those images were taken between August and November 1937 by two photographers, identified only as "S.S." and "S.C.S".

"Copies of the album of photos sold by Ah Fong come up for sale from time to time," Carstairs told AFP, adding that Detrez appears to have "duplicate prints of some photos".

Carstairs said that while the source of historic images is "often quite difficult to find out", it is "easy to find out who compiled albums or collected photographic prints".

Despite the mostly positive reaction in China, some social media users questioned Detrez's claims.

"The French guy and his companions... used these photos to steal traffic and engagement, thinking all Chinese are fools," one WeChat user wrote in a post.

Detrez did not respond to an AFP request for comment, but on Douyin called challenges to the authenticity of the photographs "malicious speculation".

S.Saleem--DT