The sixty-year-old woman lived in seclusion in the mountains, her real identity **, and the senior leaders took her back to Beijing.
Mei Niang takes her works as the first and resolutely fights against social injustice, even in hardship and setbacks, she never gives in. At the age of sixty, she still lives in seclusion in the mountains, silently sticking to her beliefs.
However, her true identity was eventually received by **, and the senior leadership personally received her and quickly arranged for her to return to the capital.
During the Anti-Japanese War, Mei Niang was born in a once prominent family of industrialists in Northeast China, but she was the outer child of her father, and her mother was forced away by Mrs. Changfang, and her life and death were unknown.
Although her adoptive mother provided food, clothing, shelter and transportation, she did not give her emotional care, and even restricted her personality development, venting her resentment towards her husband. Mei Niang's original name was Sun Jiarui, and she gave herself the pen name "Mei Niang", which means the vigilance of "no mother" and reminds herself to always remember loneliness and hardship.
After the September 18 Incident, Japan occupied a large area of land in Northeast China, destroying Sun Zhiyuan's plan to save the country through industry. He resolutely refused the invitation to serve as vice president of the "Manchukuo" ** Bank and "Minister of International Trade and Industry", and moved to North China with his family.
During this period, he actively contacted military and political dignitaries in various places to plan anti-Japanese actions, but unfortunately failed and eventually died of depression. This year, Mei Niang was sixteen years old and became an orphan ever since.
In today's society, minors who have lost both parents can suffer a huge blow that can cause them to abandon themselves and be unable to live. But in those chaotic times, few people were willing to take care of a helpless woman.
Mei Niang could only rely on herself, and at the age of seventeen, she published her own book, which was discovered by her father's former friend Zhang Honghu. Zhang Honghu is the director of the Harbin Electric Power Bureau, and he persuaded the Sun family to send Mei Niang to Japan to study.
Mei Niang, the founder of the Japanese school, also opposed the military's war, and the memory of her being hurt by the invaders is deeply imprinted in her bones. Mei Niang read a large number of articles by Chinese writers, and gained a deeper understanding of the pain and struggle of the motherland.
She later met Liu Longguang, a Chinese student, and the two had similar interests and worked together to find a way to save the country. Around them gathered a group of writers who opposed the war and saved the country, and jointly sought a way out.
Mei Niang and Liu Longguang fell in love for a long time, but they were opposed by the Sun family and cut off her financial aid, but this did not stop the communication between them. In 1942, Mei Niang returned to China.
After Mei Niang experienced the Anti-Japanese War, her life gradually returned to its original state. However, in 1948, her husband Liu Longguang died in a shipwreck, coupled with the complicated political environment, Mei Niang has been drifting in many cities.
She had been in a correctional facility, worked as a cleaner, a nanny, and even a strong man. In 1957, no one knew about her past, only that she was "guilty" and was to be punished.
For a reader, this is an endless despair. Fortunately, the appearance of Huang Zhen, China's then Minister of Culture, saved her in time. Until 1978, when she was rehabilitated, she was already over sixty years old.
During a rural inspection, Minister Huang Zhen met Mei Niang, who was undergoing local transformation. He believes that China has lost a talented Zhang Ailing, and the loss of another Mei Niang will be a huge loss, and it will create an unfillable gap for modern culture.
When he learned that Mei Niang had lived alone in the mountains for many years and suffered hardships, he decided to take Mei Niang back to Beijing to recuperate and run around for her comeback. Finally, when the time was ripe, Huang Zhen personally went to the ** field to invite her.
However, Mei Niang herself still kept a low profile, and for a long time, the publishing house sent letters to "Mei Niang" as the recipient, but no one in the unit knew who it was, let alone knew about this person.
Despite this, Mei Niang's contribution to literary creation cannot be denied.
Mei Niang's writings reveal the painful realities of life for Chinese women under imperialist Japanese control, and her literary achievements are profound enough to stand tall in the baptism of time and occupy a place in history forever.
Even though she was close to the age of six, Mei Niang was still praised by the Minister of Culture, and the senior leaders personally took her out of the mountains and let her continue her creative career in Beijing.
During her decades of suffering, she remained silent and low-key, and no one knew about her past glory, but her love and dedication to literature would never be erased.
Mei Niang shows the hard life of women in the past through the male ** in her pen, fights against unfair male power with a firm will, and reveals the bias of society. Even after the changes of the times and the change of history, she will still be remembered.