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Main attractions of Qiqihar Peace Square
The Anti-Japanese War Memorial Wall is composed of six walls, including five large embossed walls in War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression and one handprint wall of anti-Japanese war soldiers. From low to high, the total extension is 220 meters. War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression's big relief vividly reproduces the arduous course from 193 1 year "September 18th" to 1945.

The relief is made of bronze, with an overall area of 500 square meters and nearly 50 tons of copper. It is the largest bronze relief in China. The handprint wall, the core of the Anti-Japanese War Memorial Wall, is designed as a modern abstract geometric model, which adopts the form of intersecting plane subjects and combines dynamic and static, with a length of 42 meters and a height of 5.2 meters. The front pattern is bronze city bricks, each 60 cm long and 40 cm wide. It is embedded with the handprints and signatures of 600 living people who participated in China's Anti-Japanese War. Victory Monument is 37 meters high, symbolizing the full-scale outbreak of War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression in China in 1937. The overall shape means "casting a sword as a plow", which reveals that peace and development are the irreversible historical trend in today's world.

The monument tower consists of two overlapping towers, symbolizing the confrontation between justice and evil. The high tower symbolizes the final victory of the just people of China, War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression, while the low tower symbolizes the shameful failure of the Japanese invaders in the form of oblique broken lines.

The four pedestals of the Victory Monument form a broken flag of the Japanese invaders, which means that China and War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression ended in the defeat of Japanese imperialism. The commander riding a horse with a gun in the sculpture is General Ma Zhanshan, a patriotic and anti-Japanese general. The group carvings are engraved with the words "Give me back my rivers and mountains" inscribed by General Ma Zhanshan. The sculpture vividly reproduces the cruel and tragic scene of "Jiangqiao Anti-Japanese War" at that time, and fully shows the tragic heroic spirit of China's anti-Japanese army who fought bravely and died.