In the summer of p>1944, she was arranged to study in the Agricultural College of Sichuan University and engaged in the secret work of the Party. After joining the Party, according to the requirements of the Party organization, they pretended to be husband and wife with party member Peng Yongwu, who was born in * * *, and formed a "family" as the secret organ of Chongqing Municipal Committee and the counseling center for studying in underground party member. Married Peng Yongwu in 1945. People used to call her Jiang Jie to show their love.
From the end of p>1946 to the beginning of 1947, he took part in and led the students' anti-violence movement in Chongqing, and did a lot of work for Advance Newspaper, the organ newspaper of the municipal party committee. In 1947, at the climax of the student movement of "anti-civil war, anti-hunger and anti-oppression", he was appointed by the Chongqing Underground Municipal Committee, and in the winter of 1947, he went to Xiachuandong with Peng Yongwu to carry out armed struggle, serving as the liaison between the underground working committee of Xiachuandong and the temporary committee of Xiachuandong. Responsible for organizing students in colleges and universities to wage heroic struggles with Kuomintang reactionaries. Under the direct leadership of her husband, Peng Yongwu, Jiang Jie also served as the contact and organization of the underground publication Advance Newspaper of Chongqing Municipal Committee. In 1947, Peng Yongwu was appointed as a member of the East Sichuan Provisional Committee and deputy secretary of the East Sichuan Local Committee, leading the armed struggle. Jiang Jie went to the forefront of the struggle with her husband as the liaison officer of the East Sichuan Committee and the Lower Sichuan Committee. In 1948, Peng Yongwu died while organizing an armed riot. Jiang Jie fought back her grief and resolutely took over her husband's job. She said: "Only I am familiar with the relationship of this line. I should continue fighting where Lao Peng fell."
On June 14th, 1948, due to the traitor's betrayal, Jiang Jie was unfortunately arrested and detained in Chongqing Zhazidong Prison. Suffered all kinds of torture by Kuomintang military secret agents, such as tiger benches, slings, barbed Strafe, crowbars, electrocution, and even bamboo sticks nailed into ten fingers. The spy wants to open a gap from this young woman, party member, in order to crack the underground party organization in Chongqing. In the face of the enemy's torture, Jiang Jie has always been unyielding. "You can break my hand and kill my head. There is no need to organize." "Torture, that is too small a test. Bamboo sticks are made of bamboo, and the will to produce party member is made of steel! " She cared for her friends and took part in leading the struggle in prison. She was affectionately called "Jiang Jie".
On November 14th, 1949, on the eve of Chongqing's imminent liberation, Jiang Jie was killed by a Kuomintang military spy in Lanya, Geleshan Radio Station, and gave his life at the age of 29 for the * * * proletarian ideal. Before he died, Jiang Jie also wrote a suicide note, which was addressed to Andy (Jiang Jie's cousin Tan Zhuan). At that time, Jiang Jie used chopsticks to grind bamboo sticks as pens and cotton ash as ink to write this suicide note. "The letter is full of Jiang Jie's deep thoughts for her son as a mother." And this suicide note is now kept in Chongqing Three Gorges Museum. On November 14th, 27, on the 58th anniversary of Jiang Jie's sacrifice, this cultural relic, known as the "red suicide note", finally opened a long-hidden secret to the world.
The letter probably said: "We are confident that we will win and live. From the day of imprisonment (last June), I made up my mind to go to prison for two years. Now the situation is changing, and it is possible to get out of prison at the end of the year ... We are not sitting in prison for nothing, we have been learning constantly ... We are still in the jaws of death, and life and death are uncertain ... If it is unfortunate, Yuner (. Children should never be arrogant (spoiled), and it is enough to eat only plain food ... "
14th is the 58th anniversary of the sacrifice of revolutionary martyr Jiang Zhujun (Jiang Jie). Yesterday, the Three Gorges Museum publicly displayed Jiang Jie's suicide note, one of the top ten treasures of the town hall. This suicide note shows Jiang Jie's little-known tenderness.
The suicide note mentions the son
This suicide note was written by Jiang Jie to his cousin Tan Zhuan. It is about ten centimeters square, and the paper is rough. Because of its age, it has begun to turn yellow. "This is Jiang Jie's last letter before he died." The staff of the Three Gorges Museum said that Jiang Jie was not only a revolutionary, but also an ordinary woman and the mother of a child. She mentioned her son Peng Yun many times in her letter. The staff said that people think that revolutionary fighters are made of steel. In fact, heroes also have a gentle side. At the last moment of his life, Jiang Jie was most concerned about his children besides the revolutionary cause. "The handwriting of the suicide note was quite scribbled, and ink stains appeared from time to time, which shows that Jiang Jie was concerned about the children at that time."
Chopsticks, Pencil, Cotton and Ink
How did Jiang Jie quietly write down his suicide note and send it out of the prison in the ghastly Zhazidong prison? Relevant persons in the Three Gorges Museum have uncovered the mystery.
At that time, Jiang Jie was living in the No.2 female cell of Zhazidong Prison. The staff said that two months before his death, Jiang Jie wrote this suicide note to his cousin Tan Zhuan. At that time, the control of prisoners in the prison was so tight that Jiang Jie couldn't get pen and ink to write letters. Later, Jiang Jie secretly hid a bamboo chopstick. When the guards were not paying attention, he sharpened one end of the bamboo chopstick as a pen, then opened the quilt, burned some cotton to ashes, and mixed some water to make ink. Jiang Jie wrote this letter on a piece of grass paper with homemade pen and ink. After the suicide note was written, Jiang Jie quietly took the letter out of the prison through a guard and handed it to her cousin Tan Zhuan. After liberation, Tan Zhuan gave this precious suicide note to the museum and kept it to this day.