laitimes

Before the liberation of Shanghai, Tang Enbo personally sent an agent of our party to leave Shanghai.

In April 1949, on the eve of the liberation of Shanghai, in order to reduce unnecessary casualties. Our Party decided to send red agents to plot against Tang Enbo, and after the plot failed, Tang Enbo did not have the embarrassment to go to our Party personnel to plot against him, and personally sent him out of Shanghai. Who is this man, why didn't Tang Enbo arrest him and send him away from Shanghai?

Before the liberation of Shanghai, Tang Enbo personally sent an agent of our party to leave Shanghai.

Lu Jiuzhi was originally from Changsha, Hunan Province, in 1902, born in the family of officials and eunuchs, his father Lu Han was the prefect of Chenzhou in the Qing Dynasty, after the Xinhai Revolution, he served as the commander-in-chief of the five provinces of the united army Sun Chuanfang, and later served as the chief of the military law department of the five provinces, holding the power of life and death. Lu Jiuzhi was deeply influenced by the "May Fourth" Movement in his youth, liked to read progressive books such as "New Youth", and was inspired to become a communist. At the age of 18, he ran to shanghai as a worker in the spinning mill and met many like-minded people.

In the 1920s, Lu Jiuzhi was introduced to cai shuhou, an underground party member, and together founded the Shanghai Shaodun Motor Company as a cover, which was actually an underground liaison station for the party. Frequent visitors here are Premier Zhou, Ye Jianying, Xia Yan and others. In September 1926, Under the introduction of Xu Meikun, Lu Jiuzhi came to work in the secretariat of the Shanghai Underground Federation of Trade Unions led by Premier Zhou, and became the contact person for Premier Zhou's underground messenger.

Before the liberation of Shanghai, Tang Enbo personally sent an agent of our party to leave Shanghai.

In 1927, Chiang Kai-shek launched the "April 12" counter-revolutionary coup, the Kuomintang made Chang Yuqing, the leader of the Qinghong Gang, the head of the investigation, and hunted down the Communists on a large scale, and the party organization arranged for Lu Jiuzhi to infiltrate the enemy and was responsible for covertly covering and spying on intelligence. Subsequently, Chen Geng and Xiang Zhongfa were found by the spies, and it was the intelligence provided by Lu Jiuzhi that made them escape from danger. The investigation team knew that someone had leaked secrets, and they thought that Lu Jiuzhi's whereabouts were suspicious, but there was no conclusive evidence, so they could only fire Lu Jiuzhi. In June 1929, the general secretary of the Japanese Communist Party, Sano Gaku, returned from the Soviet Union, was found by secret agents in Shanghai, and under the arrangement of Premier Zhou, Sano Gaku took refuge in Lu Jiu's house, and a month later, the organization was responsible for transferring, and was unfortunately arrested on the way. After learning of this, he avoided being pursued and killed by the Kuomintang. In January 1930, Riku went to Japan to study.

After the "July 7 Incident", Lu Jiuzhi returned to China, engaged in Shanghai intelligence gathering work for the party, relied on the relationship of studying in Japan, played a pivotal position in both the military and business circles, and served as the manager of the Haian Company under the Japanese Navy. Lu Jiuzhi built the famous Shanghai social club "Xuan Palace Ballroom". Lu Jiuzhi dealt with the Wang puppet government, Japanese military officers and others, and collected a large amount of top-secret intelligence for our party.

On August 15, 1945, the Japanese surrendered. Those who relied on the Japanese puppet army to mix in the political and business circles were afraid of being liquidated by the Kuomintang and the Communist Party, but at this time, Lu Jiuzhi actually became a red man of Tang Enbo, commander-in-chief of the Kuomintang Third Front, and was hired by Tang Enbo as a major general and became a red man in Tang Province. There is also a reason for this, as early as the youth, they have known each other, when Tang Enbo studied law in Japan, he wanted to go to the Army Non-Commissioned Officer School, but there was no way out, it was with the help of Lu Jiuzhi's father Lu Han that he was able to enter. Later, under the recommendation of Lu Han, he became acquainted with Chen Yi, an important member of the Kuomintang, and was highly valued by Chiang Kai-shek. Tombaugh never dared to forget these two things. And he was like a brother to Lu Jiuzhi.

Before the liberation of Shanghai, Tang Enbo personally sent an agent of our party to leave Shanghai.

Lu Jiuzhi was also introduced to Chen Shaoguang, the daughter of Chiang Kai-shek's third wife, Chen Jieru, and married him happily, and later some people called him Chiang Kai-shek's "son-in-law riding the dragon". At this time, Lu Jiuzhi was proud of the official field, and the love field was also proud.

In 1949, the whole country was basically liberated. At this time, Tang Enbo held an army of 300,000 and sat in Shanghai. In April, the central government decided to let Lu Jiuzhi oppose Tang Enbo. Lu Jiuzhi remembered that Tang Enbo's military master Zhou Tianmiao persuaded him to revolt, and not only did he not succeed, but he was assassinated, and chen Yi, who was then the chairman of the Zhejiang provincial government, Tang Enbo's "mentor", personally wrote a letter to Tang Enbo to persuade him to conform to the people's will, and then he was reported to Chiang Kai-shek, Chen Yi was put under house arrest, and Lu Jiuzhi knew that it was difficult to plot against Tang Enbo.

Before the liberation of Shanghai, Tang Enbo personally sent an agent of our party to leave Shanghai.

After the continuous persuasion of Lu Jiuzhi for the next half a month, Tang Enbo's thinking finally relaxed, but unfortunately, Chiang Kai-shek's father and son personally came to Shanghai. He also summoned Tang Enbo to the warship on Changxing Island, and then lu Jiuzhi left Shanghai under Tang Enbo's arrangement. On May 12, 1949, the People's Liberation Army launched the Shanghai Campaign, which lasted 16 days and successfully liberated Shanghai.

After liberation, Lu Jiuzhi, under the arrangement of the central authorities, won over the military delegation of the former Kuomintang government in Japan, and then crossed east to Japan. Through Lu Jiuzhi's unremitting efforts, he finally rebelled against the military delegation of the former Kuomintang government in Japan.

In his later years of life, Lu Jiuzhi traveled to and from the two sides of the motherland many times to do some work within his ability for the peaceful reunification of the two sides of the strait. On February 12, 2008, Lu Jiuzhi died in Shanghai at the age of 106.

Read on