The Seventh National Congress of the Communist Party of China was held from April 23 to June 11, 1945 in the Yangjialing Central Auditorium, Yan'an. This meeting established Mao Zedong Thought as the party's guiding ideology and written it into the party constitution. It was a very important meeting in the party's history. In order to ensure safety, the General Assembly established a Security Office, with Chen Long as the director, and set up an internal service team, a security team, and an air defense command team. The Security Office of the Shaanxi-Gansu-Ningxia Border Region Government and the Yan'an Municipal Public Security Bureau are responsible for the security and patrol tasks in the outskirts and urban areas of Yangjialing . During the period, the Security Department and the Public Security Bureau held meetings with the Central Guard Corps many times to study security work, formulate detailed plans, and work closely together. Due to sufficient mobilization, tight organization, and clear division of labor, the guard mission was successfully completed.
During the meeting, there was an episode in the security work. Zaoyuan to Yangjialing Yanhe Bridge is an important passage to and from Yan'an. One day the river suddenly surged and the Yanhe Bridge began to shake, and the wood and stones at one end were washed away. If the bridge is washed down by the river, it will directly affect the passage of the representative. At this critical juncture, Ji Yongchang, a soldier on duty on the bridge, hurriedly jumped into the water to check, but was swept into the whirlpool by a torrent of water. Ji Yongchang swam out of the whirlpool with good water quality and found out the reason for the shaking of the wooden bridge. Together with the soldiers who came to the rescue, he repaired the bridge in time to ensure the smooth passage of the delegates.

Representatives of the Seventh National Congress of the Communist Party of China enter the venue

Representative card of Wang Zhuochao, director of the Yan'an Public Security Bureau
source |
Are you "looking" at me?
