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A 100-word story about Zhu De’s pole

Zhu De's shoulder pole was the one Zhu De used when carrying grain in Jinggang Mountain in 1928. "Zhu De's Carrying Pole" is a well-known story. For decades, it has been praised by people, educating and inspiring generation after generation.

At the end of April 1928, Zhu De and Chen Yi led part of the Nanchang Uprising and Southern Hunan Uprising teams to Jinggangshan. After successfully joining forces with the Autumn Harvest Uprising troops led by Mao Zedong, the Kuomintang regarded the Jinggangshan Revolutionary Base as a thorn in its side and a thorn in its flesh. , trying every possible means to unplug it. After they failed in the first and second military "conquest campaigns", they implemented an economic blockade in an attempt to starve, freeze and trap the Red Army to death.

In order to prepare for the third counter-campaign and smash the enemy's economic blockade, local party organizations actively mobilized the masses to send food to the mountains. Carrying food up the mountain has become a regular job for the Red Army. During those difficult days, Zhu De often personally led the soldiers down the mountain to pick up food.

Zhu De's carrying pole was what Zhu De used to carry grain at that time. "Zhu De's Carrying Pole" witnesses Zhu De's feelings of sharing the joys and sorrows with the soldiers, which is one of the guarantees for the victory of the Anti-Japanese War.

Extended information:

Zhu De's shoulder pole was the one Zhu De used when carrying grain in Jinggang Mountain in 1928. "Zhu De's Carrying Pole" is a well-known story. For decades, it has been praised by people, educating and inspiring generation after generation.

In the early 1950s, "Zhu De's Carrying Pole" was included in primary school textbooks. After the Cultural Revolution broke out in 1966, Zhu De was overthrown, and large slogans calling him a "big warlord, big careerist, and black commander" were plastered all over the streets of Beijing. More than ten years later, in February 1967, the same text was replaced by "Lin Biao's Pole." Just a few years later, the Lin Biao incident occurred, and the textbook was quietly replaced with "Zhu De's Pole".

The first anti-corruption cultural relics exhibition in 2010, hosted by the National Museum of China and the Shanghai Museum, borrowed more than 370 cultural relics across the country, including this "Zhu De's Carrying Pole" .

Includes 48 first-class and precious cultural relics, covering different categories such as ancient books, calligraphy, paintings, bronzes, porcelain, bamboo slips, tablet rubbings, production tools, daily necessities, letters and manuscripts, precious photos, documents and materials. In the layout of the exhibition, time is used as a clue to divide the exhibition into historical mirrors and clean government style (Part 1 and Part 2).

The first part reflects the spiritual realm and moral sentiments of the historical sages, and the second part clearly demonstrates the Chinese Communist Party’s continuous exploration of anti-corruption and honesty in the great process of leading the Chinese revolution, construction and reform. laws, and constantly enrich the theoretical and practical connotation of the anti-corruption path with Chinese characteristics and the fine style of integrity and hard work.

Baidu Encyclopedia - Zhu De’s Pole