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Requesting the complete version of the Chinese Expeditionary Army's military song "Military Song"

Lyrics

Lyricist: Sun Liren

If you don’t see me, the army of the Han Dynasty will end. If you don’t see me, I will wear a long tassel as a prisoner.

If you don’t see me, Ban Dingyuan, Jueyu Qingqi urges Zhanyun!

A man should be in a dangerous career, why should he let a scholarly scholar ruin his life?

Kuang Nai's country is in danger, and the feathers and feathers are racing without stopping!

Abandoning my writings from the past, I keep my writings from the war.

One call for more than one hundred thousand comrades, singing war hymns to join the army.

Qi joined the army to clean up the dust, vowing to sweep away the Japanese slaves regardless of his own safety. Extended information

The creative background of this song is the movement of intellectual youth joining the army.

In March 1943, the Legislative Yuan of the National Government promulgated the new Military Service Law, which expanded the scope of military conscription and narrowed the scope of deferred service; it encouraged young students to join the army and stipulated that students should retain their student status during their military service, which made young students, especially College students eliminate worries about their student status.

On November 23, 1943, 28 teachers and students from Santai National Northeastern University in Sichuan Province, headed by Zhao Huizhong, and more than a hundred students from various middle schools requested the county government to join the expeditionary force to kill the enemy.

On November 15, 1943, Xu Siping, chief of staff of the Lieutenant General of the Sichuan Provincial Military District, attended the "Prime Minister's Memorial Week" at Northeastern University and delivered a speech, talking about the reasons for requiring intellectuals to participate in the military stationed in India. It was said that this was the need to "strengthen the expeditionary force and open up the Yunnan-Burma Road". On the spot, 15 boys and 4 girls applied to join the army. Xu Siping wrote to Chiang Kai-shek, suggesting that the youth military movement be promoted to the entire Kuomintang-controlled area.

In December 1943, the Military Service Administration of the Ministry of Military Affairs of the National Government promulgated the "Measures for Student Voluntary Service", which stipulates: "Any student from a secondary school or above who volunteers to serve should be limited to students who are over 18 years old."

In September 1944, Chiang Kai-shek called for "one hundred thousand educated youth to join the army" and promulgated many special preferential treatment regulations for educated youth to join the army, such as suspension of employment and salary retention; students retaining their school status; families affected by anti-Japanese soldiers Preferential treatment for family members, etc. The government made a big splash in society, and newspapers and slogans stepped up publicity.

Chiang Kai-shek said on October 12, 1944: "First, it is necessary to make ordinary citizens change their past psychology about military service, so as to actively apply for military service to enrich their combat strength. Second, it is necessary to make the general public Change the attitude towards the Chinese Kuomintang, understand the spirit of sacrifice of the Chinese Kuomintang, and therefore accept the leadership of the Kuomintang and work together to complete the revolutionary mission. The latter is more important than the former.

1944. On October 21, 2011, at a meeting of educated youth joining the army, Chiang Kai-shek issued a slogan that made young people excited: "One inch of mountains and rivers, one inch of blood, one hundred thousand young people, one hundred thousand troops." For a time, an upsurge of educated youth joining the army was formed in many places.

After that, the Youth Expeditionary Army went to the front one after another, and was demobilized in the autumn of 1946. According to the article "Memories of the Youth Army" by Huang Wei, who once served as the intellectual youth army and the deputy director of the Youth Army's training department, in 1944. In more than a year after the mobilization in September, nearly 100,000 intellectual youths were recruited to join the army.

Reference: Baidu Encyclopedia - Military Song for Intellectual Youth