Li Yinqiao, a native of Anping County, Hengshui City, Hebei Province, was born in 1927. He has served as the chief of the guard for 15 years by the side of the chairman, and he is inseparable from the chairman, like father and son.
He once said to the chairman: "No matter how private my affairs are, even if I can hide them from heaven and earth, I can't hide them from you." In many articles written by Lao Qin before, Li Yinqiao was there.
On September 22, 2009, Li Yinqiao died of illness, and when he was dying, he said that he would go to Zhongnanhai to see the chairman. His memorial service was held on the 24th, and Li Ne, Mao Yuanxin and others came to bid farewell to the old man's body.
Li Yinqiao is Li Ne's favorite uncle, and the relationship between the two is very deep.
Li Ne's adoptive mother Han Guixin was introduced to Li Yinqiao by ***, and she was very concerned about Li Ne. After a failed marriage in the early 70s of the last century, Li Ne lived alone with her son, and her physical condition has been poor, especially her leg disease has made her often have a fever.
When Han Guixin and his wife learned about it, they decided to help Li Ne reorganize their family. Through their introduction, Wang Jingqing and Li Ne, retired division cadres, got acquainted, and the two soon fell in love and got married.
I don't think either of you is as good as yourselves. You left your parents at a very young age, joined the revolution, supported yourself, and did a lot of great things to serve the people.
These two children have never experienced such a life and have not endured hardships, so it is difficult for them to live independently and make a big difference. When Li Yinqiao heard ***'s words, he didn't know how to respond for a while.
He felt that ***'s statement was not entirely true. Because, whether it is Li Min or Li Ne, they are all people who have experienced hardship. Li Min was born in 1936, and when she was only a few months old, her mother, He Zizhen, went to the Soviet Union for treatment.
By the age of four, she was taken to the USSR because her mother missed her. It wasn't until the early summer of 1949 that she returned to ***.
Among the children, only Li Ne spent his childhood, adolescence and youth by his father's side, and the rest of the children did not enjoy the joy of family with their parents.
This makes Li Ne the happiest among his brothers and sisters. In her later years, Li Min wrote the book "My Father***", in which she expressed her envy for Li Ne, believing that Li Ne had received more lessons and had a deeper influence under her father's words and deeds.
Despite growing up in his father's arms, Li Ne's upbringing was not easy. Her childhood was full of challenges, especially in northern Shaanxi during the Anti-Japanese War, where the invasion of artillery fire made her experience the hardships of life.
Especially in the winter of 1947, at the age of 7, she marched with the army to fight, endured the fear of aircraft bombing, and slept in the open. Despite this, ** still insisted that his two daughters temper their will by training themselves in a difficult environment and living an ordinary life.
He warned them not to rely on him, but to fight on their own. He stressed: "You can't bluff people by hanging me on your lips, you need to rely on your own strength. ”
The two sisters, Li Min and Li Ne, were both very outstanding and did not disappoint him. Li Min was admitted to the Department of Chemistry of Beijing Normal University in 1958, and later worked in the National Defense Science and Technology Commission, living in a private house in Beijing's Terracotta Hutong, and living a real civilian life.
Li Ne, although his academic journey was more bumpy due to physical reasons, he was admitted to Peking University in 1959 with excellent results, but he interrupted his studies due to illness in 1960 and did not resume his studies until 1962.
In 1965, Li Ne graduated from Peking University, with the homonym of "Xiao Li", under the pseudonym Xiao Li, and worked as an editor in the "People's Liberation Army Daily". In 1968, Li Ne had made a request to *** to join the front line of the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Vietnam, but was rejected because of his status as a non-professional military personnel.
After that, she responded to the call of *** to "go to the mountains and go to the countryside" and went to the countryside to work.
In 1970, Li Ne was dispatched to the Wuqi Cadre School in Jiangxi Province for labor practice. During this time, she experienced regrettable marital failures. Due to the mental blow of marital setbacks and the poor physical condition, Li Ne gradually disappeared from public view from 1975 onwards, without taking up any specific duties.
Until the early 80s of the last century, her physical condition improved, and she was arranged to work in the data room of a research institute of the Communist Party of China.