
At this moment, Peng Dehuai saw someone holding his portrait high in the distance. Peng Dehuai quickly ran down from the podium and rushed into the crowd, and immediately tore off his portrait.
When everyone was stunned, Peng Dehuai quickly explained:
"Comrades, I am the Peng Dehuai in this portrait. Please don't carry my portrait." When people took a closer look, it was indeed Peng Dehuai himself, and everyone present cheered.
This is the first time Peng Dehuai has torn off his own portrait in public.
But things don’t stop there.
At the end of 1949, the First Field and Second Corps were holding an enlarged meeting in Lanzhou. As soon as Peng Dehuai entered the conference room, someone suddenly shouted: "Mr. Peng is here!"

Peng Dehuai immediately became angry, pointed at his portrait and shouted angrily:
"Quickly pick off the pig's head on the side and move it away!"
Everyone was shocked after hearing this, and the whole place was silent. Peng Dehuai said bluntly: "Let's see, how much work do I, Peng Dehuai, have to be able to stand side by side with the portraits of Chairman Mao and Commander-in-Chief Zhu in public? I said you are not allowed to hang my portrait, why do you just say it in vain?"
Seeing that Mr. Peng was angry, General Xu Guangda hurriedly had Mr. Peng's portrait taken down immediately. From then on, he no longer dared to hang his portrait in meetings.
Although Peng Dehuai had repeatedly ordered not to hang his own portrait on different occasions, he already had an unparalleled reputation in the military after serving in the military for many years. Especially during the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea, Peng Dehuai's reputation reached its peak, so some soldiers began to hang photos of General Peng in the cave. After General Peng found out, he did not get angry this time, but just silently had the portrait taken down, and once again told the young soldier not to hang it again in the future.
The reason why Mr. Peng’s portrait is always hung up is mainly because in his long career of revolutionary struggle, whenever the revolution encountered major setbacks, he could always stand up and turn the tide with his courage and courage, turning decay into magic, which made the Chinese revolution turn into difficulties in dangerous situations again and again.

Therefore, it has established a huge reputation in the hearts of the people across the country and even in the military.
No wonder Chairman Mao once wrote a poem of high praise:
The mountains are high and the roads are far and the pits are deep,
The army is galloping in all directions.
Who dares to make a bold move?
I am General Peng.