Facebook Twitter 新浪微博 google plus Instagram YouTube Friday 28 August 2015
Search
Archive
English
English>>

Brothers-in-arms:Band of China and world in WWII

(China Daily)    14:28, August 28, 2015
Email|Print

Editor's Note

China along with other Allied forces, including the Soviet Union, United States, France and England, were firm partners in the war against Fascism and Militarism, forming a bond forged with blood and sacrifice in World War II. All the soldiers, Chinese or foreign, put up formidable resistance fighting shoulder by shoulder to defeat the Fascists and militarists and many of them devoted their lives in foreign lands. Let's have a look at some of the efforts and contributions made by Chinese and overseas soldiers.

Chinese villagers helped save US pilots during WWII

Chinese residents helped the American pilots selflessly after realizing they were friends, not enemies and left many moving stories worth telling.

Chinese laborers risk lives building airports for Allies

The Chinese people built and maintained dozens of airports during World War II, providing for a massive airlift of fuel and supplies for Allied forces and serving as a crucial base to oppose Japanese aerial bombardments in the Asia-Pacific region.

The spy who saved the Soviets

Yan Baohang, a wartime secret agent who is best remembered for an intervention that helped to bring Japan's occupation of China to an end.

Soviet pilot who risked his own life to help China

A Soviet pilot, nicknamed aerial tank, helped China shoot down 7 Japanese aircraft during the War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression.

How overseas Chinese fought Japan during World War II

Overseas Chinese played a significant role in the victory in the world's anti-Fascist war by becoming a formidable resistance force. More than 13,000 Chinese were in the United States Army during World War II, accounting for more than a fifth of the total number of male overseas Chinese in the US. Let's have a look at some of the efforts and contributions made by overseas Chinese.

Scholars protected nation's wartime education

Over eight years in Hunan and Yunnan provinces, Chinese masters in all subjects gathered at NSAU, producing two future Nobel Prize laureates and eight scientists who were to work on the atomic bomb.

Yan Baohang, A legendary anti-fascist hero

Yan Baohang (1895-1968), an intelligence agent of the Chinese Communist Party during World War II, obtained the information that Germany was to attack the Soviets on June 22rd in Chongqing in May of 1941. He sent the intelligence to Yan'an through classified channels on July 6th.

Soviet captain helped China fight against Japanese aggression

A Soviet soldier died a martyr's death in southwestern China’s Chongqing having devoted himself to the Chinese People's War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression.

The most elite POW camp in the world

Northeast China played host to some of the highest-ranked Allied officers and civilian officials during the years leading up to the end of World War II. However, none of them were there of their own volition. Instead, they were being held by the Japanese.

UK scholar tuned into China's WWII resistance

Michael Lindsay arrived in China in 1938 intending merely to teach Keynesian economics. Instead, he was inspired to play a crucial role in the country's resistance against the invading Japanese forces.

US captain's China adventure

Captain Brooke Dolan II traveled to the central battlefront of Hebei province as a US observer in January of 1945 when China was undergoing the final crucial phase of the anti-Japanese war.

English version of the Chinese anthem

The March of the Volunteers,the national anthem of China was once heard in an open-air concert in New York – in rusty Chinese. It was in 1941 and the singer was American Paul Robeson.

Chinese heroes in the Soviet Union's Great Patriotic War

China and the Soviet Union were firm allies in the war against fascism and militarism, forming a bond forged with blood and sacrifice in World War II. Many Chinese devoted themselves to the battle against the German fascists at crucial, difficult times in the Soviet Union's Great Patriotic War.

Chinese delegation made contributions in the Tokyo trial

The International Military Tribunal for the Far East (IMTFE), established by the Allies after World War II, started trying 28 Japanese military and government officials for war crimes in Tokyo on May 3, 1946.

Belgium's 'Chinese mother' remembered by history

Qian Xiulin, a Chinese woman who had moved to Belgium in 1929, was hailed as Belgium's "Chinese mother" after saving the lives of nearly 100 Belgians during Nazi Germany's occupation from May 1940.

A dwindling band of brothers

Seventy years on, only a handful of Chinese combatants are still alive, and although most are now age 90 or older, their memories of the conflict are still vivid.

Beaten, but not broken

In November 1941, 2,000 young Canadian soldiers crossed the Pacific Ocean and landed in Hong Kong to fight the Japanese army, which was occupying the then-British Crown Colony. More than 500 of them never returned home.

Cameras and carbines capture life during wartime

During World War II, a team of US army photographers spent two years recording the everyday lives and struggles of people living in and around the China-Burma-India Theater, which saw some of the fiercest action of the war in the Pacific.

Healing old wounds in a medical melting pot

Editor's Note: This is the fifth in a series of special reports about the experiences of foreigners who either lived or served in China between 1937 and 1945.

Tributes paid to the 'angel of peace'

Border city honors the Chinese-Russian girl who tried to save the lives of Chinese and Russian soldiers at the end of World War II.

Soldiers took on Japan in Northeast China with Soviet help

The Anti-Japanese Amalgamated Army of the Northeast returned to China after being trained in the Soviet Union since 1940 to support the Soviet army’s march into China's northeast and fight against the Japanese Kwantung Army.

China's forgotten army

 

Cao Baoming is desperate to record as many stories as possible about events in the Changbai Mountains more than 70 years ago, when the 1,300-kilometer-long range was the main theater of resistance to the Japanese occupation of China.

 

He Fengshan, China's Schindler, saved 18,000 Austrian Jews

He Fengshan, known as the "Oskar Schindler of China," a diplomat who, while serving as the Chinese Consul General in Vienna from 1938 to 1940, saved the lives of thousands of Jews by giving them visas and helping them shelter in Shanghai as they escaped Nazi persecution during World War II.

Recalling the ceremony for Japan's surrender in China Theater

The ceremony for Japan's surrender in China Theater was held in the auditorium of the Central Military Academy in Nanjing on September 9, 1945.

Ye Shaoyin: D-day's offstage hero

The famous Normandy landing in northern France on June 6, 1944 by the Allies was only made possible with the innovation of Chinese engineer Ye Shaoyin, who improved a vacuum tube used for surface-to-air communication that helped coordinate the landing.

Residents remember foreign saviors in the city of refuge

They ran into the night as the bombs continued to fall, the rattle of machine gun fire drawing closer as they made for the last train and their last chance of escape.

'Operation duck' and the student savior

A Chinese scholar was part of a US team that liberated a Japanese internment camp in East China, freeing more than 2,000 expat civilians.

Old fisherman recalls heroic act

Shen A'gui stared vacantly at the ceiling above his bed, hands fluttering weakly like broken birds on the bunched-up blankets.

 

(For the latest China news, Please follow People's Daily on Twitter and Facebook)
(Editor:Bianji,Yao Chun)

Add your comment

Most Viewed

Day|Week

Hot News

We Recommend

Photos

prev next

Related reading