国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

CHINA> National
War veteran's unique quest helps troubled 'souls'
By Wang Ru (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-04-04 08:29

Wang Aipu has one less soul to worry about on Tomb-Sweeping Day this year.

Just before the Spring Festival in February, Wang got in touch with the daughter of Gong Fatang, a Hubei native and one of some 10,000 soldiers buried at the Shuangta Memorial Cemetery in Taiyuan, capital of Shanxi province.

The cemetery commemorates those who died in the battle to liberate Taiyuan in 1949.

"He (Gong) should be well taken care of now," said the 71-year-old Wang, after a recent visit to the cemetery.

For more than a decade, Wang, a war veteran who retired as the manager of a collectors' association, had been searching through these tombstones, identifying 34 soldiers whose heroic deeds had remained unknown.

War veteran's unique quest helps troubled 'souls'

Wang's odyssey started in April 1996, one week after the Tomb-Sweeping Day, also known as the Qingming Festival. He was wandering around an antique market in Taiyuan when he noticed a pile of old papers on the ground.

There were 84 notifications of death, marked "unsent", and a register of 866 soldiers who had died in the battle.

Related readings:
War veteran's unique quest helps troubled 'souls' 21.6m to travel by train during Tomb-Sweeping Day holiday
War veteran's unique quest helps troubled 'souls' China remembers nation's ancester Huangdi on Tomb Sweeping Festival
War veteran's unique quest helps troubled 'souls' Students, parents mourn at school debris
War veteran's unique quest helps troubled 'souls' Thousands mourn for victims of Nanjing Massacre

Wang, who joined the People's Liberation Army in the 1960s and served in the army for some 20 years, was "shocked" and "angry" that the documents had ended up in a shabby bag at the market. He paid 3,000 yuan - his entire annual salary - for these papers.

After a military historian confirmed that the letters were authentic, Wang embarked on a painful journey to send the "souls" of these dead soldiers home.

Though it came after a six-decade delay, such a form of consolation turned crucial to the family members of the war heroes.

"Their families didn't know they were buried in Taiyuan, or even about their deaths," Wang said.

"They are not just papers, but the tale of lives once lived. I could hear their souls whisper to me to send them home. I have a duty to bring peace to their souls."

The notifications showed that the soldiers had come from all parts of China; one had even joined the war from "Hong Kong county". But many of the addresses did not exist any more. Besides, 26 of those documents did not have any information other than names and divisions.

As the war waged on, many young soldiers joined in and were sent to the front. They did not get time to leave behind much personal information. And many Kuomintang soldiers who surrendered had immediately joined the People's Liberation Army in battle. That made the situation even more complicated, Wang explained.

Wang sent hundreds of letters and called the civil affairs bureaus in the soldiers' hometowns, but got little or no response.

In 2005, with the help of a journalist from Wuhan, capital of Hubei province, Wang found the home of a soldier named Hao Daihu.

Ever since Hao had left his native village in Yunmeng some 60 years ago, rumors about him had been growing. Some villagers said he had joined the Kuomintang and become a captive; others claimed that he was still alive and was leading a miserable life.

But when Wang handed over the notification and picture of Hao's tombstone to his cousin at the village, Hao's only surviving relative broke into tears.

Huo Xiaoshan was another soldier on Wang's search list.

Thanks to Wang's efforts, Huo's daughter Yuhua was able to pay her respects at his tomb in 2006.

Huo had left his wife and two daughters in 1943 and was never heard of since. Three years later, the mother and daughters started on a 10-year journey to look for Huo that turned out to be unsuccessful.

"I used to hate my father for not returning home. Now I finally know that he died for the country 60 years ago," Yuhua, then 71, had said as she stood in front of her father's tomb three years ago.

   Previous page 1 2 Next Page  

 

 

柞水县| 且末县| 吉林市| 桦南县| 宁化县| 阿拉善盟| 梨树县| 莫力| 称多县| 兴安县| 福安市| 土默特左旗| 乐安县| 龙胜| 内江市| 寿宁县| 家居| 贵州省| 新沂市| 霍城县| 新乡市| 扎兰屯市| 简阳市| 浦东新区| 巴楚县| 临邑县| 甘肃省| 连云港市| 湄潭县| 尚志市| 砚山县| 泰来县| 田东县| 和静县| 东至县| 金沙县| 高阳县| 邹平县| 屏山县| 五家渠市| 灯塔市|