Guide:
The ancient poem has clouds: "If the two loves are long, they are in the twilight of the dynasty." "In the eyes of the ancients, if two people really love each other and are unswerving until death, then I don't care about Qingqing and me for a long time, just need to see each other once a year like a cowherd and a weaver girl."
However, things in the world are unpredictable, and there are also some lovers who love each other, because of war, family and other reasons forced to separate, the sky is different, and they cannot see each other for decades. For example, a 98-year-old anti-japanese war veteran in Zhejiang, separated from his Japanese girlfriend for 75 years, still loves each other deeply in his heart, and even has never married for the rest of his life, and now his only wish is to see her again.

Why would an anti-war veteran fall in love with a woman in an enemy country and be willing to wait for her for 75 years? What kind of poignant love story is behind this, today we will walk into the life of Zhou Fukang, a veteran of the War of Resistance, and witness an unswerving love.
In 1922 (1924), Zhou Fukang was born in Xiaoshan, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, because of his good family, he was sent to school by his parents from an early age, hoping that in the future, his son would be able to stand out and honor his ancestors. In the year that Zhou Fukang was in middle school, Japan launched a war of aggression against China. As the saying goes, there are eggs under the nest, and at the critical moment of national destruction and family death, countless Sons and Daughters of China rose up to resist and threw themselves into the ranks of resisting the Japanese invaders.
Zhou Fukang, who was only 17 years old at the time, also abandoned his pen and joined the anti-Japanese team. Because of his reading and education, Zhou Fukang quickly stood out among the soldiers, and soon rose to the rank of company-level cadre and was awarded the rank of captain. After that, until the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, Zhou Fukang followed the troops to the south and the north, and participated in famous battles such as the Defense of Fuzhou.
After the unremitting efforts and sacrifices of thousands of Chinese sons and daughters, in 1945, the Japanese invaders finally announced their unconditional surrender. In order to accept the surrender of the Japanese army in Taiwan, the government sent many troops to participate in the surrender ceremony, and Zhou Fukang happened to be among them. While in Taiwan, Zhou Fukang met Keiko Biimi, a Japanese woman who was a teacher.
Because of his years of fighting against Japan, Zhou Fukang almost had a hostile heart for all Japanese, believing that all Japanese were invaders who burned and plundered, so in the beginning, he treated Keiko Katamisu with the attitude of treating prisoners of war. But after contact, he found that this Japanese woman was not the same as the previous Japanese, or even the opposite.
She didn't come here because of the war, but as a teacher, she came here to teach her children. She was gentle and kind, and slowly Zhou Fukang found herself in love with this exotic woman. In the following days, he always did his best to help Keiko Biji, perhaps seeing more of the white eyes of the locals, Zhou Fukang's concern made Keiko Bian misu feel the warmth of family, and finally the two came together.
Like many couples, Chow Fuk-yasu and Keiko Bianmi once made a vow to be together forever and not to be separated in this life and in this life. Keiko Bimi also agreed that after the end of the war, she would follow Zhou Fukang back to his hometown and be an ordinary couple.
However, it backfired, and soon Zhou Fukang's unit received the battle order, so he had to separate from Keiko Bianmi and follow the troops back to the mainland, but he did not expect that this difference was 75 years.
On the eve of the founding of New China, Zhou Fukang did not choose to go to Taiwan, but left the army and returned to his hometown. Because he and Keiko Bianmi had made a vow to return to his hometown together. If he can't wait for himself in Taiwan, Keiko Biansu may come to Zhejiang to find him, so he waits in his hometown, and this wait is 75 years.
During these 75 years, Zhou Fukang never gave up looking for Keiko Biji, and he repeatedly asked people to inquire in Taiwan, and someone told him that he had seen the name of Keiko Bimi in the list of Japanese shipwrecks, saying that she had died due to shipwrecks on the way back to Japan. However, Zhou Fukang did not give up, and he wrote many letters to the Japanese embassy and the government of Keiko's hometown, hoping that they would help find her grave, even if it was good to find her grave.
However, none of these letters were heard from the sea, and he still had not heard anything about Keiko Bianmi. But he said he wouldn't give up looking as long as he lived one day, and now his only wish was to see her again before he died.
Because of this persistent love, the old man has never married, and he is still lonely in his 90s. Now, with the help of volunteers and the government, the elderly have been admitted to welfare homes and can enjoy their old age in peace.
As the saying goes: "Love does not know what to do, and goes deeper, the living can die, and the dead can live."
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