Zhao Yiman
195-1936, formerly known as Li Kuntai, also known as Li Yichao, was called Li Jie, a native of Yibin, Sichuan. In 1926, she joined the China Communist Party. She was the first female student of Wuhan Central Military and Political School (Whampoa Military Academy, Wuhan Branch) and once served as the political commissar of the 1st Division of the 3rd Army of Northeast Anti-Japanese Coalition. In the winter of 1928, Zhao Yiman, who studied at Sun Yat-sen University in Moscow, Soviet Union, was ordered to return to China and worked in secret places in Yichang, Shanghai and Jiangxi. In April 1928, Zhao Yiman married Chen Dabang, a native of Hunan. She got pregnant soon after marriage and gave birth to a son named "Ning Er" in Yichang. In 193, Zhao Yiman brought her children back to Shanghai, and took them in foster care at the home of Chen Yueyun, the eldest brother of Chen Dabang. Immediately after the September 18th Incident, China's * * * production party issued the slogan of "organizing guerrilla warfare in Northeast China to directly attack Japanese imperialism". Zhao Yiman volunteered to go to the front to participate in the "anti-Manchu and anti-Japanese" struggle, which was approved by the Party organization. In the anti-Japanese guerrilla warfare field in Harbin, many comrades of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Union mistakenly thought that Zhao Yiman was the sister of Zhao Zhishang, the commander-in-chief of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Union, and she renamed her mistake as "Zhao Yiman". During the guerrilla warfare period in Harbin, she and Zhao Zhishang were called "Harbin No.2 Zhao" and were regarded as the greatest threat by the enemy. In the winter of 1935, the 2 nd regiment of the 1 ST Division of the 3 rd Army of the Northeast Anti-Union was trapped in a mountain by the Japanese Puppet Army. Zhao Yiman was seriously injured in order to cover the army's breakthrough. He was discovered by the Japanese army during his convalescence, and was wounded again in the battle, and was captured in a coma. During her captivity, the Japanese army tortured Zhao Yiman in order to obtain information, but she would rather die than surrender, denouncing the Japanese aggression: "My purpose, my doctrine and my belief are to fight against Manchuria and resist Japan". In order to get a confession, the Japanese army sent her to the hospital for monitoring and treatment. In the hospital, she actively publicized the truth of resisting Japan and saving the nation, and educated nurses and guards. Her indomitable perseverance infected Dong Xianxun, a police officer in custody, and Han Yongyi, a nurse in the hospital. They made an escape plan and rescued Zhao Yiman from the hospital on June 28th, 1936. However, two days after her escape, Zhao Yiman was arrested again. Zhao Yiman was taken back to Harbin, where Japanese military and police tortured her with tiger stools, pepper spray and electrocution. However, she remained unyielding and didn't reveal any truth. The brutal Japanese army knew that it couldn't get useful information from Zhao Yiman's mouth and decided to send her back to Zhuhe County for execution. A dusty Japanese file recorded Zhao Yiman's experience before his sacrifice: "The electrocution of Ms. Zhao Yiman on July 26th was accurate, and the new electrocution device worked normally, which gave Ms. Zhao Yiman the greatest pressure of overload. Under the condition of high-intensity electrocution for a long time, Ms. Zhao Yiman still didn't confess, which is really rare and can't be explained from medical physiology. " Before his execution, Zhao Yiman shouted "Down with Japanese imperialism!" "Long live the China * * * Production Party!" Heroic sacrifice, only 31 years old. When Zhao Yiman died, he didn't reveal his real name in his only will. It was not until 1957 that Zhao Yiman's son knew his mother's identity. Comrade Zhu Xinyang once asked Zhao Yiman, "Why are you called Zhao Yiman?" Zhao Yiman replied: I like the word' one', so I give myself a name with the word' one', one super, one man, and consciousness refers to life-long revolution, wholeheartedly, always to the end, and never change ... "