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Ren Bishi

Ren Bishi (Chinese: 任弼时; pinyin: Rén Bìshí; Wade–Giles: Jen Pi-shih; 30 April 1904 – 27 October 1950) was a military and political leader in the early Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

Ren Bishi
任弼时
Secretary General of the Politburo of the Chinese Communist Party
In office
19 June 1945 – 27 October 1950
ChairmanMao Zedong
Preceded byQu Qiubai
Succeeded byDeng Xiaoping
Secretary of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party
In office
July 1928 – 27 October 1950
Minister of Organization Department of the Chinese Communist Party
In office
January 1933 - March 1933
Preceded byHuang Li
Succeeded byKang Sheng
First Secretary of Chinese Communist Youth League
In office
May 1927 - June 1928
Preceded byZhang Tailei
Succeeded byGuan Xiangying
Personal details
Born30 April 1904
Hunan, Qing Empire
Died27 October 1950 (1950-10-28) (aged 46)
Beijing, China
NationalityChinese
Political partyChinese Communist Party (1922–1950)
Alma materCommunist University of the Toilers of the East
OccupationMilitary and Political Leader
Ren Bishi
Traditional Chinese任弼時
Simplified Chinese任弼时
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinRén Bìshí
Wade–GilesJen Pi-shih

In the early 1930s, Ren commanded the Fifth Red Army and was a central figure in the Hunan-Jiangxi Soviet, but he was forced to abandon his base after being pressured by Chiang Kai-shek's Fifth Encirclement Campaigns. In October 1934 Ren and his surviving troops joined the forces of He Long, who had set up a base in Guizhou. In the command structure of the new Second Front Army, He became the military commander and Ren served as its political commissar. Under threat from advancing Kuomintang troops, Ren and He were forced to retreat and went on to participate in the Long March in 1935.[1] During the Second Sino-Japanese War, Ren was the representative of the CCP at the Communist International and the Secretary of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party.

Ren was considered a rising figure within the CCP until his death at the age of 46.[2] He was the fifth most senior party member of the 7th Politburo of the Chinese Communist Party before his death.

Biography edit

Early life edit

Ren Bishi was born in rural Hunan to a teacher's family. He entered Hunan First Normal University in 1915 and collaborated with Mao Zedong to set up the Russian Research Center at the school in 1920.[3] In the same year, he also joined the youth wing of the soon-to-be Chinese Communist Party in Shanghai.[3] In May 1921, Ren and five others - including Liu Shaoqi and Xiao Jinguang - embarked on a chartered trip to the Soviet Union, going around Nagasaki, Vladivostok and the White movement blockade. Arriving in August 1921, the six of them entered the Communist University of the Toilers of the East.[4] Ren joined the Chinese Communist Party in 1922 and replaced Qu Qiubai as the translator of the history of Western revolutionary movements. After completing his studies on 23 July 1924, he arrived in Shanghai in August 1924 after a train ride through Siberia and a chartered boat from Vladivostok.[4] Under the orders of the Party, Ren was appointed to be a lecturer of the Russian language at Shanghai University.[5] He was appointed to the Zhejiang and Anhui District Committee in 1924 and was responsible for publications such as China Youth, Mission Journal and Friends of Civilians.[5]

In January 1925, Ren attended the Socialist Youth League of China's Third National People's Congress as the praesidium and changed the organization's name from "Socialist Youth League" to the "Chinese Communist Youth League".[5] With Zhang Tailei being posted elsewhere in May 1925, Ren was appointed as the First Secretary of the Communist Youth League, in charge of leading the May Thirtieth movement. Despite the failure of the movement, Ren was able to consolidate and utilise the Youth League to vastly expand its membership soon after. In early April 1926, he married Chen Congying in Shanghai.[6] Ren left for Moscow to attend the Communist Youth International Executive Committee Sixth Plenum in October and stayed in the Soviet Union until March the following year.[4]

 
November 1931 photo of the leaders of the CCP. Left to Right: Guzuo Lin, Ren Bishi, Zhu De, Deng Fa, Xiang Ying, Mao Zedong, Wang Jiaxiang
 
Ren during the Long March

Following the 1927 White Terror, Ren was elected to become a member of the Central Committee while retaining his secretariat in the Communist Youth League.[5] With the end of the First-United Front Ren sided with Mao Zedong against Chen Duxiu in August 1927 to support the idea of initiating a peasant-based revolution in China. Soon after, Ren was able to gain temporary membership of the Politburo.[5]

First Chinese Civil War (1927-1936) edit

On 15 October 1928. Ren was arrested by the local warlord in Nanling County, Anhui Province while attempting to attend a meeting by the Communist Youth League.[5] Although Ren was released by the end of 1928, his son caught pneumonia and died.[7]

In January 1929, he was appointed Minister of the CCP Central Committee and head of propaganda in the Jiangxi Soviet. On 13 August, he was made the temporary secretary of the Jiangxi Soviet, tasked to set up Today News, Education Week and Shanghai Daily. He was detained again on 17 November when attending a municipal meeting organized by the CCP. Even under electrocution and torture, Ren did not provide any confession to the police.[5] As a response to his detainment, Zhou Enlai acted as the negotiator and was able to secure a prison term for Ren and even managed to reduce the term to secure his release by 25 December 1929.[8] In April and September, he was appointed as the party secretary in Hubei and Wuhan.[5] In the same year, he was recalled to Shanghai following the failure of the uprising initiated by Li Lisan in Nanjing.

Ren was reelected as a Politburo member on 7 January 1931 during the extended Fourth Plenary Session of the CCP. On 7 November, during the First Session, he was elected a member of the Central Executive of the Chinese Soviet Republic.[9] Following the shift of communist influence from Shanghai to the Jiangxi region, Ren protected many party members such as Zhang Aiping who were implicated during the "Anti-Bolshevik League incident".[10]

During the Fourth Encirclement Campaign against Jiangxi Soviet, Ren was a proponent of direct assault and was highly critical of Mao's guerrilla strategy. During the Ningdu Conference in October, Mao was replaced by Zhou Enlai as the West Army Commander and was criticized by Ren during the same time. In lieu of his actions against Mao, in the 7th Plenary Session of the CCP, Ren admitted that his actions were wrong and the result of a "moment of sectarian activity".[11]

Due to Bo Gu and others adopting Wang Ming's left-leaning stance of party ideology, Ren was forced to transfer from his post in the Soviet Central Bureau of Organization Department to become the party secretary in the Hunan–Jiangxi Soviet.[12] Upon his appointment, he was faced with critical problems such as the Fifth Encirclement Campaign against Jiangxi Soviet and the rebuilding of party elements following counter-insurgency plans. He halted the counter-revolutionary plans and released Wang Shoudao, Zhang Qilong and others to expand the Red Sixth Army to the Sixth Army Group.[13] In December, he replaced Cai Huiwen and was appointed as the Political Commissar of the Hunan–Jiangxi Soviet.

In August 1934, accompanying Red Sixth Army commanders Xiao Ke and Wang Zhen, Ren organized a successful Westward march to retreat from the increasing unsuccessful defense in the Hunan-Jiangxi Soviet.[14] Ren met with the Red Third Army on 24 October 1934 in Yinjiang Tujia and Miao Autonomous County, Guizhou and formed the Red Second Army Group under the command of He Long.[14] Even though this army group managed to retain control over parts of Hunan and Hubei, Chiang Kai-shek's National Revolutionary Army adopted a multi-pronged conventional assault which forced the retreat of Communist forces. By November, Ren, He Long and Guan Xiangying were able to break out of the military blockade established by Chiang's army in Sangzhi, Hunan through a joint command of the Second and Sixth armies and proceeded on with the Long March.[14]

On 2 July 1936, Ren's Second and Sixth Army Groups met with the Red Fourth Army led by Zhang Guotao and Xu Xiangqian in Sichuan, Garzê.[14] Ren was then the political commissar of the Red Second Army.[15] With the end of the Long March in October, Ren and Peng Dehuai were appointed as the Political Commissars for the Front Command of the CCP to resist Hu Zongnan's forces that were in Shaanxi.[16] By December, was a member of both the Revolutionary Military Commission of the CPC Central Committee and the Presidium.[14]

 
He Long and Ren Bishi during the Seventh Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in 1945

During the Second Sino-Japanese War (1936–1945) edit

In January 1931, Peng Dehuai and Ren alongside Yang Hucheng went to Xi'an to plan the front line defense against the Japanese forces through mobilizing the Seventh Route Army and the Northeast Army. During August, he was a member of the Central Military Commission which oversaw the renaming of Communist forces to become the Eighth Route Army.[16] By 16 October, Ren was head of the Political Department of the Eighth Route Army and the CPC Central Military Commission.[17]

In 1938, he attended the CPC Central Military Commission North Branch's meeting. In March, he was sent by the CCP Central Committee to negotiate with the Comintern in Moscow.[18] In July, he officially replaced Wang Jiaxiang as the representative of CCP at Comintern. Ren returned to Yan'an on 26 March 1940, serving in the Secretariat and the Organizational Department of the CCP. In April 1942, he led the Yan'an Rectification Movement in the Shaan-Gan-Ning border region. Ren, alongside Mao and Liu Shaoqi as members of the Organizational Department of the CCP, became in charge of the northwest regions of Gansu-Ningxia and Shaanxi,[19] and in the same month, was in charge of organizing the 8th Route Army based in Xi'an.[20] Ren was part of a team that concluded the leadership problems between the Fourth Plenary Session and the Zunyi Conference in the "Resolution on Certain Questions in the History of the CCP" report.[21]

 
Ren (leaning on railing) attending the first anniversary celebrations of the PRC at Tiananmen on October 1, 1950 - a month before his death

During the Second Chinese Civil War (1945-1949) edit

During the Seventh National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in March 1945, Ren was elected as a Politburo member of CPC Central Committee and the party's Central Secretary-General.[22] As part of the Politburo Standing Committee of the Communist Party, he was preceded by only Mao Zedong, Liu Shaoqi, Zhou Enlai and Zhu De. In late November, Ren was diagnosed with serious illness by a doctor sent under the orders of Stalin, which reduced his participation in daily party politics. On 26 August 1946, Ren began drafting his proposal on establishing the Communist Youth.[23]

In 1947, he was appointed to head various land and economic reforms (land reform) in Shanbei but was relieved gradually due to his high blood pressure.

When violence against landlords as part of the land reform movement surged in early 1948, Ren was one of the party leaders who criticize the movement.[24] Ren announced a policy shift in January 1948, guaranteeing that targets of the movement would nonetheless be allowed to keep a share of property.[25] This policy change contributed to a shift away from economic struggle and to political struggle.[25] The Party instructed that fewer landlords should be targeted and work teams should not beat or torture their targets.[25]

Also in 1948, Ren attended the Xibaipo Conference with Zhou, Liu, and Zhu De.[26] Despite his illness, Ren assisted in the army command during the Liaoshen, Huaihai and Pingjin Campaigns.

In February 1949, he was appointed head of the Preparatory Committee for the Communist Youth League of China. He was made the honorary president of the Central Committee on 12 April during his recuperation at Jade Spring Hill. However, Ren's condition worsened and he had to be transferred to Moscow for further treatment. Following the outbreak of the Korean War, Ren returned to China on 28 May. Ren attended the first anniversary of the PRC held at Tiananmen on 1 October.[23] Afterwards, Ren was active in studying the situation of the Korean War but suffered a stroke due to fatigue.[27] Three days after his stroke and following unsuccessful treatment, he died in Beijing at 12:00 on October 27.[28]

Death and legacy edit

Upon his death, his memorial service was held in the Imperial Ancestral Temple on 30 October, with Mao, Liu, Zhou, Peng Zhen and Zhu De as the pall-bearers.[28] Due to regulations against cremation, Ren was buried with a funeral service on 18 July 1951 in the Babaoshan Revolutionary Cemetery. Marshal Ye Jianying praised Ren as being the "party camel, who worked long and hard without rest, never seeking enjoyment, never borne grudges against anyone. He was our model and best party member, an outstanding revolutionary."[29]

The CCP Central Committee agreed to the publishing of the Selected Works of Ren Bishi in 1987 under Reople's Publishing House, after which the Collected Works of Ren Bishi followed in 1989.

References edit

  1. ^ Leung, Edward Pak-wah. Historical Dictionary of the Chinese Civil War. United States of America: Scarecrow Press. 2002. ISBN 0-8108-4435-4. p.50.
  2. ^ "Ren Bishi". People's Daily Online. Retrieved April 21, 2011.
  3. ^ a b "1904-1920 Timeline of Ren Bishi". People of the Chinese Communist Party. Chinese Communist Party.
  4. ^ a b c "哪位中共将领四度旅居苏联 与莫斯科结下不解之缘". Fenghuang History. May 6, 2015. Retrieved November 27, 2015.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h "1921-1930 Timeline of Ren Bishi". People of the Chinese Communist Party. Chinese Communist Party.
  6. ^ 兰梦 (2006). 强烈驱动者. Hyweb Technology Co. Ltd.
  7. ^ Helen Praeger, Young (2001). Choosing Revolution: Chinese Women Soldiers on the Long March. University of Illinois Press. p. 68. ISBN 9780252092985.
  8. ^ 穆欣 (2002). 隐蔽战线统帅周恩来. China: 中国青年出版社. ISBN 9787500646860.
  9. ^ "1931年11月7日 中华苏维埃第一次全国代表大会召开--中国共产党新闻--中国共产党新闻网". cpc.people.com.cn. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  10. ^ 胡华. 中共党史人物传. Vol. 8. 陕西人民出版社. p. 28.
  11. ^ 任弼时 (1987). 任弼时选集. 人民出版社. p. 249.
  12. ^ "1933年任弼时曾因"打毛排弼"被调离苏区中央局--党史频道-人民网". dangshi.people.com.cn. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  13. ^ 中共汨罗县委宣传部, ed. (1979). 怀念任弼时同志. 湖南人民出版社. p. 95.
  14. ^ a b c d e "1931-1940 Timeline of Ren Bishi". People of the Chinese Communist Party. Chinese Communist Party.
  15. ^ 近代史硏究. 中國社會科學出版社. 1983. p. 145.
  16. ^ a b 陝西省志. Vol. 59. Shaanxi, China: 陝西人民出版社. pp. 184, 194.
  17. ^ "开国元勋任弼时". www.gmw.cn. Retrieved 2015-12-26.
  18. ^ Kampen, Thomas (2000). Mao Zedong, Zhou Enlai and the Evolution of the Chinese Communist Leadership. NIAS Press. p. 93.
  19. ^ 王健英 (1995). 中国共产党组织史资料汇编. 中共中央党校出版社. p. 610.
  20. ^ 张树军 (2001). 中国共产党八十年历史纪事. 湖北人民出版社. p. 304.
  21. ^ 叶心瑜 (2006). 放眼看长征. 红旗出版社. p. 18.
  22. ^ Kampen, Thomas. Mao Zedong, Zhou Enlai and the Evolution of the Chinese Communist Leadership. MAXRead. p. 78.
  23. ^ a b 冯蕙 (2002). 走向新中国: 中共五大书记. 中央文献出版社. p. 547. ISBN 978-7-5073-1211-9.
  24. ^ DeMare, Brian James (2019). Land wars : the story of China's agrarian revolution. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. p. 113. ISBN 978-1-5036-0849-8. OCLC 1048940018.
  25. ^ a b c DeMare, Brian James (2019). Land wars : the story of China's agrarian revolution. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-1-5036-0849-8. OCLC 1048940018.
  26. ^ 西柏坡的故事. 河北人民出版社. 1979. p. 49.
  27. ^ 湖南党史月刊. 《湖南党史月刊》编辑部. 1991. pp. 7–9.
  28. ^ a b Chang-tai Hung (2011). Mao's New World: Political Culture in the Early People's Republic. Cornell University Press. pp. 228–229. ISBN 978-0-8014-4934-5.
  29. ^ 怀念任弼时同志. China: 湖南人民出版社. 1979. p. 3.
Party political offices
Preceded by Secretary-General of the Politburo of the Chinese Communist Party
19 June 1945 – 27 October 1950
Succeeded by
Preceded by Head of Organization Department of the Chinese Communist Party
January 1933 - March 1933
Succeeded by
Preceded by First Secretary of Chinese Communist Youth League
May 1927 - June 1928
Succeeded by
Guan Xiangying

bishi, also, series, chinese, 任弼时, pinyin, rén, bìshí, wade, giles, shih, april, 1904, october, 1950, military, political, leader, early, chinese, communist, party, 任弼时secretary, general, politburo, chinese, communist, partyin, office, june, 1945, october, 195. See also Ren Bishi TV series Ren Bishi Chinese 任弼时 pinyin Ren Bishi Wade Giles Jen Pi shih 30 April 1904 27 October 1950 was a military and political leader in the early Chinese Communist Party CCP Ren Bishi任弼时Secretary General of the Politburo of the Chinese Communist PartyIn office 19 June 1945 27 October 1950ChairmanMao ZedongPreceded byQu QiubaiSucceeded byDeng XiaopingSecretary of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist PartyIn office July 1928 27 October 1950Minister of Organization Department of the Chinese Communist PartyIn office January 1933 March 1933Preceded byHuang LiSucceeded byKang ShengFirst Secretary of Chinese Communist Youth LeagueIn office May 1927 June 1928Preceded byZhang TaileiSucceeded byGuan XiangyingPersonal detailsBorn30 April 1904Hunan Qing EmpireDied27 October 1950 1950 10 28 aged 46 Beijing ChinaNationalityChinesePolitical partyChinese Communist Party 1922 1950 Alma materCommunist University of the Toilers of the EastOccupationMilitary and Political LeaderIn this Chinese name the family name is Ren Ren BishiTraditional Chinese任弼時Simplified Chinese任弼时TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinRen BishiWade GilesJen Pi shihIn the early 1930s Ren commanded the Fifth Red Army and was a central figure in the Hunan Jiangxi Soviet but he was forced to abandon his base after being pressured by Chiang Kai shek s Fifth Encirclement Campaigns In October 1934 Ren and his surviving troops joined the forces of He Long who had set up a base in Guizhou In the command structure of the new Second Front Army He became the military commander and Ren served as its political commissar Under threat from advancing Kuomintang troops Ren and He were forced to retreat and went on to participate in the Long March in 1935 1 During the Second Sino Japanese War Ren was the representative of the CCP at the Communist International and the Secretary of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party Ren was considered a rising figure within the CCP until his death at the age of 46 2 He was the fifth most senior party member of the 7th Politburo of the Chinese Communist Party before his death Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 First Chinese Civil War 1927 1936 1 3 During the Second Sino Japanese War 1936 1945 1 4 During the Second Chinese Civil War 1945 1949 2 Death and legacy 3 ReferencesBiography editEarly life edit Ren Bishi was born in rural Hunan to a teacher s family He entered Hunan First Normal University in 1915 and collaborated with Mao Zedong to set up the Russian Research Center at the school in 1920 3 In the same year he also joined the youth wing of the soon to be Chinese Communist Party in Shanghai 3 In May 1921 Ren and five others including Liu Shaoqi and Xiao Jinguang embarked on a chartered trip to the Soviet Union going around Nagasaki Vladivostok and the White movement blockade Arriving in August 1921 the six of them entered the Communist University of the Toilers of the East 4 Ren joined the Chinese Communist Party in 1922 and replaced Qu Qiubai as the translator of the history of Western revolutionary movements After completing his studies on 23 July 1924 he arrived in Shanghai in August 1924 after a train ride through Siberia and a chartered boat from Vladivostok 4 Under the orders of the Party Ren was appointed to be a lecturer of the Russian language at Shanghai University 5 He was appointed to the Zhejiang and Anhui District Committee in 1924 and was responsible for publications such as China Youth Mission Journal and Friends of Civilians 5 In January 1925 Ren attended the Socialist Youth League of China s Third National People s Congress as the praesidium and changed the organization s name from Socialist Youth League to the Chinese Communist Youth League 5 With Zhang Tailei being posted elsewhere in May 1925 Ren was appointed as the First Secretary of the Communist Youth League in charge of leading the May Thirtieth movement Despite the failure of the movement Ren was able to consolidate and utilise the Youth League to vastly expand its membership soon after In early April 1926 he married Chen Congying in Shanghai 6 Ren left for Moscow to attend the Communist Youth International Executive Committee Sixth Plenum in October and stayed in the Soviet Union until March the following year 4 nbsp November 1931 photo of the leaders of the CCP Left to Right Guzuo Lin Ren Bishi Zhu De Deng Fa Xiang Ying Mao Zedong Wang Jiaxiang nbsp Ren during the Long MarchFollowing the 1927 White Terror Ren was elected to become a member of the Central Committee while retaining his secretariat in the Communist Youth League 5 With the end of the First United Front Ren sided with Mao Zedong against Chen Duxiu in August 1927 to support the idea of initiating a peasant based revolution in China Soon after Ren was able to gain temporary membership of the Politburo 5 First Chinese Civil War 1927 1936 edit On 15 October 1928 Ren was arrested by the local warlord in Nanling County Anhui Province while attempting to attend a meeting by the Communist Youth League 5 Although Ren was released by the end of 1928 his son caught pneumonia and died 7 In January 1929 he was appointed Minister of the CCP Central Committee and head of propaganda in the Jiangxi Soviet On 13 August he was made the temporary secretary of the Jiangxi Soviet tasked to set up Today News Education Week and Shanghai Daily He was detained again on 17 November when attending a municipal meeting organized by the CCP Even under electrocution and torture Ren did not provide any confession to the police 5 As a response to his detainment Zhou Enlai acted as the negotiator and was able to secure a prison term for Ren and even managed to reduce the term to secure his release by 25 December 1929 8 In April and September he was appointed as the party secretary in Hubei and Wuhan 5 In the same year he was recalled to Shanghai following the failure of the uprising initiated by Li Lisan in Nanjing Ren was reelected as a Politburo member on 7 January 1931 during the extended Fourth Plenary Session of the CCP On 7 November during the First Session he was elected a member of the Central Executive of the Chinese Soviet Republic 9 Following the shift of communist influence from Shanghai to the Jiangxi region Ren protected many party members such as Zhang Aiping who were implicated during the Anti Bolshevik League incident 10 During the Fourth Encirclement Campaign against Jiangxi Soviet Ren was a proponent of direct assault and was highly critical of Mao s guerrilla strategy During the Ningdu Conference in October Mao was replaced by Zhou Enlai as the West Army Commander and was criticized by Ren during the same time In lieu of his actions against Mao in the 7th Plenary Session of the CCP Ren admitted that his actions were wrong and the result of a moment of sectarian activity 11 Due to Bo Gu and others adopting Wang Ming s left leaning stance of party ideology Ren was forced to transfer from his post in the Soviet Central Bureau of Organization Department to become the party secretary in the Hunan Jiangxi Soviet 12 Upon his appointment he was faced with critical problems such as the Fifth Encirclement Campaign against Jiangxi Soviet and the rebuilding of party elements following counter insurgency plans He halted the counter revolutionary plans and released Wang Shoudao Zhang Qilong and others to expand the Red Sixth Army to the Sixth Army Group 13 In December he replaced Cai Huiwen and was appointed as the Political Commissar of the Hunan Jiangxi Soviet In August 1934 accompanying Red Sixth Army commanders Xiao Ke and Wang Zhen Ren organized a successful Westward march to retreat from the increasing unsuccessful defense in the Hunan Jiangxi Soviet 14 Ren met with the Red Third Army on 24 October 1934 in Yinjiang Tujia and Miao Autonomous County Guizhou and formed the Red Second Army Group under the command of He Long 14 Even though this army group managed to retain control over parts of Hunan and Hubei Chiang Kai shek s National Revolutionary Army adopted a multi pronged conventional assault which forced the retreat of Communist forces By November Ren He Long and Guan Xiangying were able to break out of the military blockade established by Chiang s army in Sangzhi Hunan through a joint command of the Second and Sixth armies and proceeded on with the Long March 14 On 2 July 1936 Ren s Second and Sixth Army Groups met with the Red Fourth Army led by Zhang Guotao and Xu Xiangqian in Sichuan Garze 14 Ren was then the political commissar of the Red Second Army 15 With the end of the Long March in October Ren and Peng Dehuai were appointed as the Political Commissars for the Front Command of the CCP to resist Hu Zongnan s forces that were in Shaanxi 16 By December was a member of both the Revolutionary Military Commission of the CPC Central Committee and the Presidium 14 nbsp He Long and Ren Bishi during the Seventh Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in 1945During the Second Sino Japanese War 1936 1945 edit In January 1931 Peng Dehuai and Ren alongside Yang Hucheng went to Xi an to plan the front line defense against the Japanese forces through mobilizing the Seventh Route Army and the Northeast Army During August he was a member of the Central Military Commission which oversaw the renaming of Communist forces to become the Eighth Route Army 16 By 16 October Ren was head of the Political Department of the Eighth Route Army and the CPC Central Military Commission 17 In 1938 he attended the CPC Central Military Commission North Branch s meeting In March he was sent by the CCP Central Committee to negotiate with the Comintern in Moscow 18 In July he officially replaced Wang Jiaxiang as the representative of CCP at Comintern Ren returned to Yan an on 26 March 1940 serving in the Secretariat and the Organizational Department of the CCP In April 1942 he led the Yan an Rectification Movement in the Shaan Gan Ning border region Ren alongside Mao and Liu Shaoqi as members of the Organizational Department of the CCP became in charge of the northwest regions of Gansu Ningxia and Shaanxi 19 and in the same month was in charge of organizing the 8th Route Army based in Xi an 20 Ren was part of a team that concluded the leadership problems between the Fourth Plenary Session and the Zunyi Conference in the Resolution on Certain Questions in the History of the CCP report 21 nbsp Ren leaning on railing attending the first anniversary celebrations of the PRC at Tiananmen on October 1 1950 a month before his deathDuring the Second Chinese Civil War 1945 1949 edit During the Seventh National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in March 1945 Ren was elected as a Politburo member of CPC Central Committee and the party s Central Secretary General 22 As part of the Politburo Standing Committee of the Communist Party he was preceded by only Mao Zedong Liu Shaoqi Zhou Enlai and Zhu De In late November Ren was diagnosed with serious illness by a doctor sent under the orders of Stalin which reduced his participation in daily party politics On 26 August 1946 Ren began drafting his proposal on establishing the Communist Youth 23 In 1947 he was appointed to head various land and economic reforms land reform in Shanbei but was relieved gradually due to his high blood pressure When violence against landlords as part of the land reform movement surged in early 1948 Ren was one of the party leaders who criticize the movement 24 Ren announced a policy shift in January 1948 guaranteeing that targets of the movement would nonetheless be allowed to keep a share of property 25 This policy change contributed to a shift away from economic struggle and to political struggle 25 The Party instructed that fewer landlords should be targeted and work teams should not beat or torture their targets 25 Also in 1948 Ren attended the Xibaipo Conference with Zhou Liu and Zhu De 26 Despite his illness Ren assisted in the army command during the Liaoshen Huaihai and Pingjin Campaigns In February 1949 he was appointed head of the Preparatory Committee for the Communist Youth League of China He was made the honorary president of the Central Committee on 12 April during his recuperation at Jade Spring Hill However Ren s condition worsened and he had to be transferred to Moscow for further treatment Following the outbreak of the Korean War Ren returned to China on 28 May Ren attended the first anniversary of the PRC held at Tiananmen on 1 October 23 Afterwards Ren was active in studying the situation of the Korean War but suffered a stroke due to fatigue 27 Three days after his stroke and following unsuccessful treatment he died in Beijing at 12 00 on October 27 28 Death and legacy editUpon his death his memorial service was held in the Imperial Ancestral Temple on 30 October with Mao Liu Zhou Peng Zhen and Zhu De as the pall bearers 28 Due to regulations against cremation Ren was buried with a funeral service on 18 July 1951 in the Babaoshan Revolutionary Cemetery Marshal Ye Jianying praised Ren as being the party camel who worked long and hard without rest never seeking enjoyment never borne grudges against anyone He was our model and best party member an outstanding revolutionary 29 The CCP Central Committee agreed to the publishing of the Selected Works of Ren Bishi in 1987 under Reople s Publishing House after which the Collected Works of Ren Bishi followed in 1989 References edit Leung Edward Pak wah Historical Dictionary of the Chinese Civil War United States of America Scarecrow Press 2002 ISBN 0 8108 4435 4 p 50 Ren Bishi People s Daily Online Retrieved April 21 2011 a b 1904 1920 Timeline of Ren Bishi People of the Chinese Communist Party Chinese Communist Party a b c 哪位中共将领四度旅居苏联 与莫斯科结下不解之缘 Fenghuang History May 6 2015 Retrieved November 27 2015 a b c d e f g h 1921 1930 Timeline of Ren Bishi People of the Chinese Communist Party Chinese Communist Party 兰梦 2006 强烈驱动者 Hyweb Technology Co Ltd Helen Praeger Young 2001 Choosing Revolution Chinese Women Soldiers on the Long March University of Illinois Press p 68 ISBN 9780252092985 穆欣 2002 隐蔽战线统帅周恩来 China 中国青年出版社 ISBN 9787500646860 1931年11月7日 中华苏维埃第一次全国代表大会召开 中国共产党新闻 中国共产党新闻网 cpc people com cn Retrieved 2015 12 20 胡华 中共党史人物传 Vol 8 陕西人民出版社 p 28 任弼时 1987 任弼时选集 人民出版社 p 249 1933年任弼时曾因 打毛排弼 被调离苏区中央局 党史频道 人民网 dangshi people com cn Retrieved 2015 12 23 中共汨罗县委宣传部 ed 1979 怀念任弼时同志 湖南人民出版社 p 95 a b c d e 1931 1940 Timeline of Ren Bishi People of the Chinese Communist Party Chinese Communist Party 近代史硏究 中國社會科學出版社 1983 p 145 a b 陝西省志 Vol 59 Shaanxi China 陝西人民出版社 pp 184 194 开国元勋任弼时 www gmw cn Retrieved 2015 12 26 Kampen Thomas 2000 Mao Zedong Zhou Enlai and the Evolution of the Chinese Communist Leadership NIAS Press p 93 王健英 1995 中国共产党组织史资料汇编 中共中央党校出版社 p 610 张树军 2001 中国共产党八十年历史纪事 湖北人民出版社 p 304 叶心瑜 2006 放眼看长征 红旗出版社 p 18 Kampen Thomas Mao Zedong Zhou Enlai and the Evolution of the Chinese Communist Leadership MAXRead p 78 a b 冯蕙 2002 走向新中国 中共五大书记 中央文献出版社 p 547 ISBN 978 7 5073 1211 9 DeMare Brian James 2019 Land wars the story of China s agrarian revolution Stanford California Stanford University Press p 113 ISBN 978 1 5036 0849 8 OCLC 1048940018 a b c DeMare Brian James 2019 Land wars the story of China s agrarian revolution Stanford California Stanford University Press p 114 ISBN 978 1 5036 0849 8 OCLC 1048940018 西柏坡的故事 河北人民出版社 1979 p 49 湖南党史月刊 湖南党史月刊 编辑部 1991 pp 7 9 a b Chang tai Hung 2011 Mao s New World Political Culture in the Early People s Republic Cornell University Press pp 228 229 ISBN 978 0 8014 4934 5 怀念任弼时同志 China 湖南人民出版社 1979 p 3 Party political officesPreceded byQu Qiubai Secretary General of the Politburo of the Chinese Communist Party19 June 1945 27 October 1950 Succeeded byDeng XiaopingPreceded byHuang Li Head of Organization Department of the Chinese Communist PartyJanuary 1933 March 1933 Succeeded byKang ShengPreceded byZhang Tailei First Secretary of Chinese Communist Youth LeagueMay 1927 June 1928 Succeeded byGuan Xiangying Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ren Bishi amp oldid 1185344779, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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