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Yu Qingfang and Daming Mercy Country

author:Liang Jichao

The waves rose on Hutou Mountain, and the thunder struck Nanzhuang.

The song of sorrow in the rivers and rivers burns the flames, and the iron horse rides wildly to save the country.

Jiao Bar is full of hatred, and mourning is all over the wild blood wine frontier.

The great enemy who is out of the head, Zheng Zheng iron bone Yu Qingfang.

Yu Qingfang and Daming Mercy Country

Space-led the trapped rebels

Note: Yu Qingfang, a native of Kaohsiung, worked as a policeman during the Japanese rule period, and later resigned from his post for his crime and engaged in jai-ying activities. Like the mainland, Taiwan's Jai religion is a mixed belief that combines the three religions of Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism, and Yu Qingfang uses religious organizations and mobilizes the masses to carry out armed resistance against Japan.

Yu Qingfang and Daming Mercy Country

Yu Qingfang after his arrest

In the process of organizing the anti-Japanese struggle, Yu Qingfang also became acquainted with Luo Jun and Jiang Ding, two patriotic religious figures, and strengthened the strength of Taiwan's armed anti-Japanese struggle.

Yu Qingfang and Daming Mercy Country

Luo Jun

Yu Qingfang and Daming Mercy Country

Jiang Ding

In 1915, Yu Qingfang, Luo Jun, Jiang Ding, and others conspired to organize the "Ming Mercy State" at the Wangye Temple of "Xilai'an" in Tainan, and Yu Qingfang served as the Grand Marshal, setting off a struggle against the Japanese colonial authorities by force.

Yu Qingfang and Daming Mercy Country

Because the place where they planned the uprising was in tainan City, Xilai'an Wangye Temple, also known as the "Xilai'an Incident"; the leader of the uprising was Yu Qingfang, the Grand Marshal of The Great Marshal of Daming Mercy, also known as the "Yu Qingfang Incident"; the incident occurred in the Taiwan Yujing (Tainan Yujing) area, also known as the "Xilai'an Incident".

Yu Qingfang and Daming Mercy Country

This incident was the largest and the largest number of sacrifices in the Taiwan people's armed anti-Japanese incident during the Japanese occupation period, with more than a thousand deaths, and Yu Qingfang and others were captured and hanged in prison, which fully exposed the cruelty and inhumanity of the Japanese colonial authorities. This incident was the first time that The Taiwanese combined religious forces in a special way of resisting Japanese rule. After the Xilai'an Incident, the Taiwan People's Anti-Japanese Movement transformed from armed struggle into a parliamentary democracy movement.

Yu Qingfang and Daming Mercy Country

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