Grandpa Mao admired this person and said that he would be supervised by him every day, which shows his lofty status in the party.
Lin Yuying, also known as Zhang Hao, was born into a peasant family and joined the Communist Party of China in February 1922 as an outstanding leader of the labor movement. In the summer of the same year, he came to work as a worker at the Hanyang Iron and Steel Plant and led the workers' activities.
At that time, the workers' club was holding a strike, but it was raided by the military police, and the workers were very angry. Han Laosan, the foreman of the iron furnace, was bribed by the capitalists and took the lead in starting the strike, trying to sabotage the strike.
If the furnace is not extinguished, the strike will fail, and if it is extinguished, the furnace will be destroyed and the workers will lose their jobs. In this case, the only solution is to stop work without extinguishing the ignition.
However, Han Laosan was reluctant to do so. Lin Yuying proposed a solution: "As long as you put up a slogan that says 'Kill Han Laosan', you can solve the problem."
There are doubts about this. Lin Yuying said confidently: "Even if the striking workers don't go, the workers of the iron furnace will rise up and beat him to death!" Sure enough, as soon as the slogan was posted, Han Laosan stopped showing up.
The furnace stopped, and the strike was won.
In 1925, Lin Yuying organized a workers' rally in Shanghai and was suddenly attacked by the military and police. Lin Yuying led the workers to break out of the encirclement, the military police opened fire, Lin Yuying led everyone to resist, and was stabbed by the enemy with a bayonet in the struggle.
He endured his pain, commanded the crowd, and shouted: "Rush! Rush! Rush! As a result, he was wounded again by enemy soldiers and passed out on the ground. The workers lifted Lin Yuying and rushed towards the military police, who were terrified.
Lin Yuying was sent to the hospital and rescued from danger. At the beginning of 1927, Lin Yuying became the secretary of the Hankou Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of China. At the beginning of 1928, the Hunan Provincial Committee of the Communist Party of China was destroyed, and he was sent to restore the party organization in Hunan and serve as a member of the Standing Committee of the Provincial Party Committee.
Soon, the enemy searched for Communists everywhere, and he was forced to go to Biyun Temple to become a monk, and gave the Dharma name Ming Zhi. The elders hid him under the melon shed to avoid being hunted by the enemy soldiers. In 1930, Lin Yuying served as the secretary of the Provisional Provincial Party Committee of Manchuria, but because of the traitor's betrayal, he was imprisoned, and the enemy tortured him, and he did not spit a word.
In the end, he was tortured to the point of being skinny, his spirit was greatly damaged, and he was considered a madman, so he was rescued by the party organization. In 1933 he went to Moscow to serve as a member of the Chinese delegation to the Comintern.
In December 1935, he changed his name to Zhang Hao, returned to northern Shaanxi from Moscow, and joined *** and others. Hold his hand and say, "You're back, we have one more general in our ranks!"
Subsequently, Zhang Hao and *** did the work of Zhang Guotao, who was making trouble, and forced Zhang Guotao to cancel the pseudo-**, set up the Southwest Bureau, and went north to join the Red Army in Huining.
In July 1937, after the outbreak of the Anti-Japanese War, Zhang Hao was appointed as the political commissar of the 129th Division, one of the three main forces of the Eighth Route Army, and went to the anti-Japanese front line with ***.
However, due to his frequent encephalopathy and even fainting many times, ** and *** decided to transfer him back to Yan'an**. After returning to Yan'an, Zhang Hao accepted ** on the one hand, and on the other hand, he was responsible for the workers' movement and cultivating the backbone of workers' resistance against Japan.
Subsequently, he was co-opted as a member of the Sixth Plenary Session of the Sixth Central Committee of the Communist Party of China. During the group photo, ** cordially pulled Zhang Hao to his side and said, "Come, I'm with you."
So, in the group photo of the Sixth Plenary Session of the Sixth Central Committee, *** and Zhang Hao stood side by side in the back row.
1. Historical footage from the second position from the right. On April 30, 1940, Zhang Hao and others attended the celebration of May Day.
During the speech, Zhang Hao suddenly had a cerebral hemorrhage and was immediately sent to the hospital for rescue. Although the rescue was timely and not life-threatening, his hemiplegia symptoms failed to ** and he has been bedridden ever since.
Due to limited medical access and the fact that Zhang Hao has been tortured in prison many times in the past, his health has been severely impaired, and his encephalopathy, heart and liver conditions have deteriorated.
In late February 1942, Zhang Hao's condition worsened. On March 5, when he was dying, he said to his secretary and wife affectionately: "I can no longer fight, and I regret that I have not been able to see the victory of the revolution."
He asked the organization to bury him on Taohualing, so that he could see *** and *** every day, and in the early morning of the next day, Zhang Hao died in Yan'an ** Hospital.
** Knowing that Zhang Hao died, I was very sad. When he learned that Zhang Hao had made a request to be buried in Taohualing after death when he was dying, his heart was even heavier.
He nodded sadly in agreement, and said affectionately: "Let Comrade Zhang Hao supervise us every day." At Zhang Hao's funeral, **and**led the members to see him off in front of the hearse.
When the team arrived at the mountain road of Taohua Mountain, ** and Ren Bishi personally carried the coffin forward, and the old man Xu Teli also took off his cotton clothes, stepped forward in sweat, and carried the pole.
The team buried Zhang Hao on the top of the mountain. **The elegy written for Zhang Hao "Loyal to the country, although he dies is still glorious" is a true portrayal of Zhang Hao's life. The book "The Ten Marshals: The Little-Known History of the Ten Commanders of the People's Liberation Army" records Zhang Hao's kinship and his personal relationship in detail, and this book is the annual bestseller of the China History Publishing House, and has ranked first on the bestseller list of China's first affairs.