According to Hong Kong media on March 3, Wang Jingqing’s funeral ceremony was held at 9:00 this morning (3) at Beijing‘s Eight Treasure Mountains. The entire ceremony was low-key and ended in just one hour. Hundreds of people, including Mao’s former guards, special trains, health care workers and other people, went to see him off, but no current leaders attended the farewell ceremony.
According to land media reports, at 6:58 a.m. on March 1, Wang Jingqing, Mao’s son-in-law, died due to medical treatment.
Wang Jingqing, a native of Yulin, Shaanxi province, was born in 1927 and joined the Communist Party’s army in 1940, serving in the Communist Party’s Central Guard Division after 1949 and as a guard with Liu Shaoqi. In the early 1980s, Wang Jingqing was transferred to the chief of staff of the Nujiang Military Sub-district of the Yunnan Military Region of the Communist Party of China. He was introduced to Li Ne by Mao Zedong’s former chief of security, Li Yinqiao, and they married in early 1984. Wang Jingqing retired from the second dry rest house of the Beijing garrison of the Chinese Communist Army.
Li Ne, the only daughter of Mao and Jiang Qing, was born in Yan’an in 1940, moved to Beijing with her Parents in 1949, and attended the third grade at Yuying Primary School. 1959, Li Ne enrolled in the History Department of Peking University and graduated in 1966. After her graduation, Li Ne coincided with the rise of the Cultural Revolution, and because of her special background, she was assigned to work for the Chinese Communist Party‘s military newspaper.
On January 17, Lin Biao signed a letter and Mao Zedong gave instructions to affirm Li’s action.
Due to the status of Mao and Jiang Qing, in January 1967, at the age of 27, Li Ne became the head of the editor-in-chief leading group (equivalent to editor-in-chief) of the CPC military newspaper and was promoted to the head of the office group of the Central Cultural Revolution Group.
In 1973, Li Ne attended the 10th National Congress of the CPC, and from 1974 to 1975, Li Ne served as secretary of the CPC Beijing Pinggu County Committee and deputy secretary of the CPC Beijing Municipal Committee. 1976, after Mao Zedong’s death, Mao’s wife Jiang Qing was arrested and sentenced to imprisonment, and the Cultural Revolution ended. When Deng Xiaoping came to power, Li Ne’s political positions were abolished and she was once idle.
In 1986, Li Ne was assigned to work in the Secretary Bureau of the General Office of the CPC Central Committee and retired after the 1990s. In 2003, Li Ne became a member of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC).
Radio Free Asia has revealed that after Deng Xiaoping came to power, Li Ne’s living situation was more difficult than that of ordinary people. According to the article, after Mao’s death in 1976, Li Ne walked around the streets of Beijing wearing a white washed blue blouse and a pair of fat old army pants, looking like a poor and backward civilian woman.
When Jiang Qing was sentenced to Life imprisonment, Li Ne was also expelled from Zhongnanhai and mysteriously disappeared for five years. After regaining her freedom, Li Ne had fallen ill all over. Before Jiang Qing’s suicide, Li Ne needed treatment and maintenance for various chronic diseases and spent thousands of dollars on medical expenses before and after. But when Li Ne went to the unit for reimbursement, she had to pay for most of the Medicine herself.
The article also revealed that Li Ne had written a letter to the CPC Central Committee asking whether she was entitled to inherit her father Mao Zedong’s property during his lifetime, especially the manuscript fees. She said she did not dare to ask for more, but only wanted to inherit a part of the property, hoping to get a few thousand dollars from her father’s past writing fees to make up for the deficit she owed due to medical treatment.
The letter to the CPC Central Committee was rejected by Deng Xiaoping. Deng Xiaoping said that Mao’s past property “is the property of the party and the state, and no individual can just withdraw it”.
After Li Ne was refused, she asked for help through Yang Shangkun’s son, Yang Shaoming, who told his Family that Deng Xiaoping was “not generous enough”.
The article also mentions the life of Xu Xiaoning, the son of Li Ne and her ex-husband, who was born in 1972. (In 1984, Li Ne remarried Wang Jingqing and Xu Xiaoning took his stepfather’s surname and changed his name to Wang Xiuzhi.
According to the article, Wang Xiaozhi grew up following his mother around the streets of Beijing looking for the cheapest “vegetable leaves”. When he saw leaves thrown away under the counter at the market, he rushed to pick them up and put them in his mother’s basket. When the market saleswoman looked at the child, who had just reached school age, with pity, she could not believe that the child was Mao’s grandson.
Wang Xiaozhi recalled that in the era of major family changes, he learned to “look at people’s faces” as soon as he could remember. “At that Time, I felt I was a child who always made mistakes because people always stared at me.”
The article says that this proves that Deng’s hatred for Mao had reached an unbearable level. The “Cultural Revolution” launched by Mao led to the paralysis of Deng Xiaoping’s eldest son, Deng Pufang, from the waist down, which made Deng angry at Mao’s descendants.
Tie Liu, a well-known Beijing Writer, published an initiative in 2011 that Mao Zedong had killed hundreds of thousands of people in the Party during his lifetime, and in 1957, he used the “Yang Conspiracy” trap to brand more than 500,000 national elites as “anti-party and anti-socialist”. In 1957, Mao Zedong used a “yang conspiracy” trap to brand more than 500,000 national elites as “anti-Party and anti-socialist” “rightists”, causing them to break up their families and sink for more than 20 years.
Mao Zedong violated the laws of nature and launched the “Great Leap Forward” campaign to “overtake Britain and catch up with the United States”, resulting in the starvation of more than 37 million Chinese people. Mao is one of the biggest factors in China’s turmoil, the victims, if they are still alive, are witnesses to history, are witnesses to the sins of Mao Zedong.
The mainland scholar Mao Yushi has also written an article counting the crimes of Mao Zedong, including psychological darkness, raping and raping women, engaging in class struggle, and killing tens of millions of people.
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