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Chapter 21 19. Where is the Young General?

I write and write② 倪匡 656Words 2023-02-05
In the book "The Sacrifice of Chinese Anti-Japanese Generals", the youngest general is Zhou Shudong.Dare to say that in Hong Kong, there are very few people who have heard of General Zhou's tuba.Because the general's birth and death years are: 1918 to 1937. Yes, from 1918 to 1937, General Zhou died at the age of nineteen. His military position when he died for the country was: Commander and Political Commissar of the Fourth Division of the Second Army of the First Route Army of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army.He served as the political commissar of the regiment at the age of seventeen and the teacher at the age of eighteen.He was not from a military academy, but just a poor boy from Shandong who immigrated outside the customs. As a division commander, he relied on his bravery in fighting on the battlefield and his clever and excellent command.

A young general like this is undoubtedly a military genius born in the world.During that turbulent era in China, there were many similar military geniuses, and finally a new dynasty was created. General Zhou died when the Northeast was fighting against the enemy before the official War of Resistance began. He died in the battle against the invaders, for the country and the nation, and his young life was brilliant. Sigh, I don't fully understand the heroic feelings of saving the country and the people.Imagine that if General Zhou had not died in the Anti-Japanese War and fought until the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, he would naturally have a higher military rank, and then he would be involved in the civil war.

Will beating an aggressor feel the same as beating one's own compatriots? Regardless of this, if the civil war is smooth sailing, by the end of the civil war, such a military genius is not a marshal, but at least a general, right? And then, what will happen?Will they have to lie on the ground in the prison to pick up food to eat, so that they will starve to death?Or were they carried around in baskets after their legs were broken, to accept the insults of struggle? (The above two are just two of the thousands of examples that come at hand.) How would General Zhou accept the humiliation he suffered when he died at that time?Die young, get the right time, get the right place.

Is the son's soul a ghost hero?Rest in peace, young General Zhou.
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