Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - 1who is the protagonist on February 29th?

1who is the protagonist on February 29th?

1935 65438+On February 9th, students gathered near twelve city gates and archway respectively. From these places, the students gathered in the street and headed for Zhongnanhai. At that time, this was the office of a senior Kuomintang official. The students gathered here and submitted a petition to the government.

We have never seen young college students in China show such great political courage as ordinary soldiers. This scene made people who participated in the parade and onlookers feel very excited. Hundreds of young people dressed in blue sang generously along the way and marched into the Forbidden City. They don't respect those policemen and conservative parents. In the past eight years, nothing like this has ever happened in China under the rule of the Kuomintang.

The local police at the scene didn't expect the westerners who sympathized with the students to be there, so they were confused and just interfered with the students in a perfunctory way. When the military police tried to arrest people, people in blue surrounded the police, stuffed them with leaflets and shouted patriotic slogans. Cops who have nothing to answer usually retreat with an embarrassed smile. Are they all a little patriotic? Later, the fire brigade was also called and pointed the faucet at the parade. Although soaked to the skin, these young people rushed up and strutted forward.

Suddenly, a group of political gendarmes in black leather jackets, led by Chiang Kai-shek's nephew, arrived on motorcycles. Driving a machine gun on a motorcycle straddle and rushing to the demonstrators. In a tense moment, guys wearing "black leather jackets" took up arms and posed as shooting positions. Some people even shot into the air. The team hesitated a little, but kept going. Journalists and photographers gathered around, hoping that foreign witnesses could stop the tragedy. We did, so an officer raised his hand and ordered his soldiers to put down their guns.

In China, shopkeepers, housewives, artisans, monks, teachers and businessmen in silk robes cheered for students in the street, or ran out to ask for leaflets. Even the rickshaw pullers shouted the slogan banned by the authorities: "Down with the pseudo-independence movement! Down with Japanese imperialism! Resist Japan and save the country! " Young intellectuals like Li Rui and Wei Junyi devoted themselves to freedom and democracy, and rekindled the ideal torch in their later years.