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What does it mean to have your name on my ID? The back story is touching Zhao Yiman profile

author:Strait Net

Before his death, the anti-Japanese hero Zhao Yiman was always heroic and unyielding in the face of torture by the Japanese army. In her suicide note, she instructed her son: "Don't forget that your mother died for the country. Knowing the identity of his mother, the son copied down the suicide note word by word and stabbed "Zhao Yiman" on his hand. Today, in Zhao Yiman's hometown, landmarks named after her can be found everywhere. The village where she was born was renamed "Yiman Village", and "Yiman" was also printed on the villagers' IDENTITY cards. Prosperous China as you wish, salute!

What does it mean to have your name on my ID? The back story is touching Zhao Yiman profile

Anti-Japanese hero Zhao Yiman profile

Zhao Yiman (October 25, 1905 – August 2, 1936), female, Han ethnicity, formerly known as Li Kuntai, also known as Li Yichao, known as Li Jie. A native of Baihua Town, Yibin County, Sichuan Province (present-day Baihua Town, Cuiping District, Yibin City, Sichuan Province). A member of the Communist Party of China and a national hero of the Anti-Japanese War, he studied at Sun Yat-sen University in Moscow. Zhao Yiman served as the political commissar of the Second Regiment of the Third Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Coalition Army in 1935, and was arrested in November 1935 during the struggle against the Japanese Kou and inaugurated in August 1936. Zhao Yiman has left a poem "Binjiang Shuhuai", his hometown Yibin has "Zhao Yiman Memorial Hall", related movies include "Zhao Yiman", "My Mother Zhao Yiman" and so on. On September 10, 2009, he was named one of the "100 Heroic And Exemplary Figures Who Made Outstanding Contributions to the Founding of New China".

Source: CCTV News

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