Eugene Wei works hard by himself to establish the American Museum of Asian Holocaust.

World Daily , West Coast Edition, special report, Aug. 19, 2002.

This special report of the World Daily newspaper expresses its honor and respect to Eugene for his single-handed realization of this high ideal, needed so much in America due to the lack of media coverage and education of the Asian Holocaust.
Eugene’s sense of justice originates in his mother’s college advisor, Ms. Minni Vautrin, who gave shelter at the campus of GinLing Women’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in Nanjing to over 10,000 chinese women during the Rape of Nanjing (1937). Ms. Vautrin was respected by the Chinese as the living “GuanYin”, goddess of mercy.


“ Had my mother not left beautiful Nanjing, which had so much meaning for her, I would not be here today.” Ava Su recalls Eugene’s reminder that they were all homeless refugees at birth because their parents were driven out of Nanjing by the Japanese military terrorists.
When asked if it was worth traveling between the East and West coast establish the Museum, he shows a picture of a victim of the Jin Hua, ZheJiang anthrax attack who was the same age as himself.