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In 1950, a IOU was found in the home of a landlord in Sichuan, and the founding marshal personally asked why?

History is the memory of things that have been said and done. —Carl Baker

In 1950, during the vigorous land reform movement, the Changshou County Working Group in Sichuan Province found a stack of IOUs in the home of the landlord Fu Dehui. But after a closer look at the IOUs, one of them was a signature that borrowed a hundred ocean IOUs, which surprised them. It turned out that the name of the founding marshal Zhu Laozong was signed on it. As we all know, Zhu Lao was always one of the main founders of the republic, so how could a great founding hero be related to the landlord in a small village?

In 1950, a IOU was found in the home of a landlord in Sichuan, and the founding marshal personally asked why?

After this matter was reported, I thought that there would be no result in this stone sinking into the sea. Who knew that Mr. Zhu admitted this fact, and then wrote a letter himself. In the letter, he told the story behind the IOU. As we all know, before joining the revolution, Mr. Zhu was already in a high position, serving as the chief of the police department of Yunnan Province and the director of the police department of the provincial capital. But during his garrison in Luzhou, Sichuan, he was inspired by the October Revolution and the May Fourth Movement in Russia, and gradually realized that the old method of military struggle would not work. If we want to change the face of poverty and backwardness in China, we must find a new way out. So he decided to go abroad with friends and eventually went to Germany to study in 1922.

In 1950, a IOU was found in the home of a landlord in Sichuan, and the founding marshal personally asked why?

However, during his study abroad, Mr. Zhu was arrested and deported by the German government for engaging in revolutionary activities. At that time, he was strapped for money, and when he lacked travel expenses, he borrowed a hundred oceans from a Chinese student who was also studying in Germany, and this person was Fu Dehui. Fu Dehui has outstanding achievements, is generous and generous, and has helped many Chinese students in Germany who have lived in distress, including Mr. Zhu, who also wrote an IOU after borrowing money, promising to be kind today and will be repaid in the coming day. After returning to China, he lost contact due to the underdevelopment of transportation and communications, coupled with the chaotic situation in the country at that time.

In 1950, a IOU was found in the home of a landlord in Sichuan, and the founding marshal personally asked why?

It was not until 1950, when the working group found an IOU in Fu Dehui's home, that the two old friends were reunited for a long time. At that time, Mr. Zhu also specifically mentioned in that explanatory letter: "Fu Dehui is engaged in science, don't embarrass him to send him to Beijing." Fu Dehui studied and lived in Beijing for three months, and his thinking was greatly improved. After returning to Sichuan, he was appointed by the then Sichuan Eastern Travel Bureau as the director of the laboratory of the Industrial Department, and since then he has successively specialized in the research and education of the chemical industry in the Southwest Ministry of Industry and the Southwest Branch of the Comprehensive Survey Institute. He died in 1976 at the age of 78.

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