laitimes

Brief Introduction of Revolutionary Martyrs Who Died for the War of Resistance Against Japan

author:Dong Xiao Song

Revolutionary martyrs are the eternal spiritual monuments of a nation and a country. Without the sacrifices of the revolutionary martyrs, there would be no happy life for us now. We must remember history, remember those ancestors who gave us blood and lives!

Peng Xuefeng (September 9, 1907 – September 11, 1944), born in Zhenping County, Nanyang City, Henan Province, was an outstanding commander and military strategist of the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army and the New Fourth Army, who participated in the Third, Fourth, and Fifth Counter-Encirclement and Suppression Campaign, the 25,000-Mile Long March, organized the Battle of Tuchengling, led the army to capture Loushan Pass twice, took Zunyi City directly, crossed the Jinsha River, flew over the Dadu River, marched into Tianquan City, and passed through the steppe, and was one of the highest generals sacrificed by the New Fourth Army in the War of Resistance Against Japan. He devoted himself to the revolution for 20 years and was praised by Mao Zedong and Zhu De as "a good example for communists".

Brief Introduction of Revolutionary Martyrs Who Died for the War of Resistance Against Japan

Cheng Zhongyi (1916-1944.2.10) was a chinese poet who used the name Chongyuan and was a native of Wuzhai, Shanxi. He joined the Communist Party of China in April 1937. In January 1938, the Wuzhai County Committee of the Communist Party of China was established, and he served as the director of propaganda. In the autumn of 1939, he was appointed commissioner of the Suidong Special Bureau. In 1940, he was transferred to the Suizhong Specialized Bureau. In the autumn of 1943, he was transferred to the Suinan Special Bureau. On the morning of February 10, 1944, he was betrayed by the traitors and surrounded by heavy Japanese troops in the area of Guo Carpenter Ditch in Liangcheng County. Sacrificed to cover the breakout of other personnel. He was 28 years old.

Brief Introduction of Revolutionary Martyrs Who Died for the War of Resistance Against Japan

Kan Weiyong (1900 – November 9, 1944), formerly known as Qingfu (庆福), was born in Liuzhou, Guangxi. Chief of Staff of the Guilin City Defense Command of the 16th Army Group of the National Revolutionary Army. At the end of 1939, when the Japanese army invaded Guinan, Kan Weiyong served as the chief of staff of the Major General of the 31st Army of the Kuomintang Army, leading the troops to fight against the Japanese army. In 1942, he was appointed as the commander of the 131st Division and served as the commander of the Southwest Guizhou Defense. In 1944, the Japanese army launched the Battle of Yuxianggui. In September of the same year, he led his troops to Guilin and carried out the task of holding Guilin with friendly forces. From the end of October, the war situation was tight. The command post department fought hard with the enemy and killed many enemies. On November 8, the Japanese army attacked Qixingyan with poison gas, killing more than 800 officers and men of the 391st Regiment of the defenders. At the same time, the 392nd Regiment suffered heavy casualties in the fierce battle, the regimental commander Wu Zhan was killed, and the 393rd Regiment also suffered casualties. On the evening of the 9th, he deeply hated the failure to complete the task of holding Guilin and committed suicide at the division command post. He was 44 years old.

Brief Introduction of Revolutionary Martyrs Who Died for the War of Resistance Against Japan

Cai Shan (1911--1945), formerly known as Cai Zhi'an, also known as Cai Weicheng, also known as Wei Cheng, a native of Heishan County, Liaoning Province, served as deputy chief of staff of the 13th Military Subdistrict of the Jin-Cha-Ji Military Region. On July 4, 1945, he was ordered to lead his troops to move from Fengluan to Fengyuzun Plain on a mission, and was surrounded by a "pseudo-Manchu crusade" at Yangjiayu in Zunhua County.

Brief Introduction of Revolutionary Martyrs Who Died for the War of Resistance Against Japan

Ma Lixun (1920-1945), a native of Zichuan, Shandong (present-day Zichuan District, Zibo). In April 1940, he joined the Eighth Route Army and was incorporated into the 12th Company of the 4th Detachment of the Shandong Column. He joined the Communist Party of China in May 1944, and in July of the same year, he was awarded the honorary titles of "Special Combat Hero" and "Demolition King". In August 1945, he died heroically in the battle of Yancun in Tengxian County, Shandong Province, at the age of 25. In September of the same year, the Lunan Military Region of the Eighth Route Army named Ma Lixun's platoon as "Ma Lixun Platoon" and Yancun village in Tengxian County as "Lixun Village", and carried out the "Ma Lixun-style blasting campaign" in the army.

Brief Introduction of Revolutionary Martyrs Who Died for the War of Resistance Against Japan

We live in a happy era, and I hope that you will not forget that tragic history and those ancestors who gave us blood and lives!

Read on