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In 1980, a Japanese girl came to China to look for relatives and claimed that her father was a founding marshal

In 1980, a Japanese girl came to China to look for relatives, and according to her, her father was a founding marshal. To explain this problem, we have to start from the Hundred Regiments Battle in August 1940, when the person in charge of this battle was Marshal Nie, who led everyone to fight to the death on a position, and later some soldiers of the Eighth Route Army rescued two little girls from the position, one of whom was slightly older, she was 5 years old named Mihoko, and the other little girl was still swaddled in swaddling.

In 1980, a Japanese girl came to China to look for relatives and claimed that her father was a founding marshal
In 1980, a Japanese girl came to China to look for relatives and claimed that her father was a founding marshal

In 1980, a Japanese girl came to China to look for relatives, and according to her, her father was a founding marshal. To explain this problem, we have to start from the Hundred Regiments Battle in August 1940, when the person in charge of this battle was Marshal Nie, who led everyone to fight to the death on a position, and later some soldiers of the Eighth Route Army rescued two little girls from the position, one of whom was slightly older, she was 5 years old named Mihoko, and the other little girl was still swaddled in swaddling.

Marshal Nie was particularly surprised when he saw the two little girls, and the soldiers of the Eighth Route Army explained that the parents of the two children had already died because of the war, and they could not bear to let the two children die, so they saved them. The kindness of the soldiers of the Eighth Route Army made Marshal Nie particularly emotional, and he thought about it for a while and decided to have the two girls sent to the Japanese camp.

In 1980, a Japanese girl came to China to look for relatives and claimed that her father was a founding marshal

In 1980, a Japanese girl came to China to look for relatives, and according to her, her father was a founding marshal. To explain this problem, we have to start from the Hundred Regiments Battle in August 1940, when the person in charge of this battle was Marshal Nie, who led everyone to fight to the death on a position, and later some soldiers of the Eighth Route Army rescued two little girls from the position, one of whom was slightly older, she was 5 years old named Mihoko, and the other little girl was still swaddled in swaddling.

Marshal Nie was particularly surprised when he saw the two little girls, and the soldiers of the Eighth Route Army explained that the parents of the two children had already died because of the war, and they could not bear to let the two children die, so they saved them. The kindness of the soldiers of the Eighth Route Army made Marshal Nie particularly emotional, and he thought about it for a while and decided to have the two girls sent to the Japanese camp.

Because the two sides are after all hostile relations, our Eighth Route Army soldiers, few people understand Japanese, and are not willing to take care of the Children of the Japanese, not long after, the two little girls returned to the Japanese camp under marshal Nie's arrangement, at the same time, Marshal Nie also wrote a letter to the commander of the Japanese camp, explaining the ins and outs of the matter, in that big environment, even if Marshal Nie killed the two little girls, no one could pick out any faults, but Marshal Nie generously sent the two little girls back. This kind of behavior made the Japanese officer particularly moved, and he wrote back to express his gratitude.

After the end of the war, Mihoko returned to the island country with a large Japanese army. Later, from her relatives, she heard the story of her childhood, and she was particularly grateful to Marshal Nie, and after the normalization of diplomatic relations between China and Japan, Mihoko came to China as a representative of Japan, personally visited Marshal Nie's side, and also called him her father. When he learned that the little girl who had been saved had grown up, Marshal Nie was also very sighing. In 1999, the 100th anniversary of Marshal Nie's birth, our city of Jiangjin and the capital city of Japan signed a friendly city agreement, and also presented each other with pennants, and Mihoko and Marshal Nie's daughter General Nie Li attended the meeting at the same time, witnessing this moment of great historical significance.

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