After the victory of the Anti Japanese War, five members of Wang Jingwei s family were on the roste

Mondo Social Updated on 2024-01-30

In modern Chinese history, the names of Wang Jingwei and Chen Bijun can be said to be synonymous with ** thief and big traitor. Under their "words and deeds", they have two sons and a daughter who are also on the "roster" of traitors.

Wang Jingwei, formerly known as Wang Zhaoming, is a historical figure whose life experience is full of contradictions. In his youth, in order to awaken the people, he had the feat of sacrificing himself to assassinate the regent of the Qing Dynasty. However, after he stepped into the "knowing the destiny of heaven", he sold himself to the Japanese and organized a puppet regime, and his behavior was "said to be killable by the people of the country".

On November 10, 1944, Wang Jingwei died of illness in Nagoya, Japan, at the age of 61. As China's number one traitor, although he escaped the trial of him after the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, he was next to the tomb of Sun Yat-sen's Mausoleum, but he was blown up by sappers sent by the Kuomintang authorities, and was punished by destroying his body.

Wang Jingwei and his wife Chen Bijun had six children, the fifth of whom died.

Chen Bijun, born in Malaysia in 1891, is the daughter of Chen Gengji, a wealthy man in Nanyang, and her ancestral home is Jiangmen, Guangdong. At the age of fifteen, she joined the branch of the League established by Sun Yat-sen in Malaysia. It was precisely because of the League that she met Sun Yat-sen's right-hand man Wang Jingwei. Since then, she has never left Wang's side, and has fully supported Wang Jingwei's career in all aspects, especially in terms of funds.

In 1912, the year of the success of the Xinhai Revolution, Chen Bijun married Wang Jingwei as he wished.

In December 1938, Wang Jingwei left and went to Hanoi, Vietnam, to prepare to cooperate with the Japanese. Wang Jingwei became a traitor, and Chen Bijun played a role in fueling the flames.

After the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, Chen Bijun was sentenced to life imprisonment for "traitor" by the national ** at that time. On June 17, 1959, Chen Bijun died of illness in Shanghai Tilanqiao Prison at the age of 67.

The eldest son, Wang Wenying, was born in France in 1913. After the success of the Xinhai Revolution, Wang Jingwei and his wife went to France to study. Wang Wenying served as the quartermaster of the Third Hall of the Military Commission of the Wang puppet regime. After the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, he was sentenced to Shanghai Tilanqiao Prison for "traitor". Released from prison on early parole in 1948, he moved first to Hong Kong and then to the United States, where he settled incognito in California. In 2011, Wang Wenying, who was nearly 100 years old, passed away.

The third daughter, Wang Wensui, was born in Shanghai in 1922. She has been following her parents, serving as Wang Jingwei's secretary in Wang Pseudo**, and is Wang Jingwei's right-hand man. After the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, she fled Hong Kong and escaped trial. He eventually settled in Hong Kong and was a professor at the University of Hong Kong. In 2002, Wang Wensui died of illness at the age of 80.

The second son, Wang Wenyi, was born in France in 1928 and graduated from the ** Army Military Academy in Nanjing. He followed his father into Wang's puppet ** work. After the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, he was sentenced to one year and six months in prison for the crime of "traitor". Because he was only 17 years old, he was given a five-year suspended sentence. Later, he also moved to Hong Kong and became a well-known bridge architect in Hong Kong. After China's reform and opening up, he returned to the mainland many times to invest and carry out project cooperation. Unlike his older siblings, Wang Wendi is the only descendant of the Wang family who left Chinese mainland and set foot again on his homeland.

Related Pages