Combo photo taken on Nov. 15, 2019 shows Zhou Wenbin, a survivor of the Nanjing Massacre, taking care of his fish at home (L, top); Zhou Wenbin sitting in his bedroom (L, central); Zhou Wenbin showing bullet wound on his left foot by Japanese invaders (L, bottom); Zhou Wenbin telling his past experience (up, central); a copy photo of Zhou Wenbin (2nd, R), his father Zhou Zhongyi (1st R, front) and his brother Zhou Wenxin (2nd R, second line) (C, bottom); Zhou Wenbin doing chores at home (R, top); Zhou Wenbin checking medicine instruction (R, central); Zhou Wenbin posing for a photo with his wife Fan Cuihua at home. Zhou Wenbin was born in January of 1938. During a mopping-up operation by the Japanese invaders, Zhou Wenbin, still an infant sleeping in a cradle, was seriously injured on his left foot by gunshot. His 11-year-old brother Zhou Wenxin, playing nearby, failed to escape and got a bullet clean through his leg. Zhou Wenbin got married in 1972 and has two daughters now. This year marks the 82nd anniversary of the Nanjing Massacre, in which more than 300,000 Chinese were killed by the Japanese invaders who occupied Nanjing on Dec. 13, 1937, marking the start of six weeks of destruction, pillage, rape and slaughter in the city. By Dec. 12, 2019, the number of registered survivors of the massacre has decreased to 78. Reporters from Xinhua spent many years to look for the survivors of Nanjing Massacre and record their current lives. (Xinhua/Han Yuqing, Ji Chunpeng)