In January 1949, Peiping was peacefully liberated, and millions of Peking people happily welcomed the People's Liberation Army into the city in the bleak winter wind. However, the liberation of Peking was not obtained by the sound of gunfire and guns everywhere like some cities,

11949, Beijing peacefully liberated . Millions of people in Beiping happily welcomed the People's Liberation Army into the city in the bleak winter wind. However, the liberation of Peking was not obtained by the sound of gunfire and guns everywhere like some cities, and the formation of this peaceful scene that everyone yearned for is inseparable from the merits of a former senior Kuomintang general named Fu Zuoyi. However, as a senior general of the Kuomintang, why is Fu Zuoyi willing to join our party and give peace to the people of Peking?

Here, we have to mention Fu Zuoyi's eldest daughter Fu Dongju. In fact, when Fu Zuoyi served in the Kuomintang army, Fu Dongju had long seen through the intrigue and selfish struggles in the Kuomintang. She deeply realized that if China was handed over to such a government, the people would always be in darkness.

However, since Fu Dongju received ideological education from her father's patriotism and family love, her body also had the blood of Jiang Men Yingjie. It would be impossible for Fu Dongju to turn a blind eye to all this. Fortunately, at this moment, Fu Dongju came into contact with Communist Party members and met a group of like-minded partners. So, Fu Dongju secretly joined the Communist Party of China without telling her father.

Father Fu Zuoyi used his flesh and blood to resist foreign aggression on the battlefield, while Fu Dongju was in a dim room, using her pen to scold the enemy's shameful behavior. The father and daughter were in the same heart but different, and this situation lasted until 1948. Because in this year, the corruption and incompetence of the Kuomintang had already caused them to lose the hearts of the people, and the Communist Party's liberation of the entire China was the general trend.

However, at this time, the Kuomintang general stationed in Peiping was Fu Dongju's father Fu Zuoyi. For the lives and property of millions of people in Peking, as well as countless cultural relics and monuments, the Party Central Committee specially contacted Fu Dongju and asked her to go to Peking to convince her father to rebel.

So Fu Dongju went to Peking overnight to have a conversation with her father. She used her sincere words to inform her father of all relevant information such as the pros and cons of current affairs, as well as the lives of the people. At the same time, she also passed on the news she obtained in Peking to the Party Central Committee. These news provides more powerful help for the Party Central Committee to take the next steps. With Fu Dongju's efforts and persuasion, Fu Zuoyi finally agreed to the uprising, peacefully liberate Peking, and return peace to the people of Peking.

Fu Zuoyi served as a member of the People's Government and other important positions after the founding of New China, and continued to do his best to serve the country and the people. Fu Dongju, who made great contributions to the peaceful liberation of Peking, first held an important position in the Progress Times in Tianjin, and later went to work in the Southwest Service Group and founded the Yunnan Daily. The pen is her life and a weapon for which she fights. It is with this courage and dream of speaking out for the world that Fu Dongju has made remarkable progress in her position.

11951, Fu Dongju was transferred to the People's Daily. After working in the journalist department and the Literature and Art Department here for many years, he was transferred to Hong Kong Xinhua News Agency to be responsible for united front work. This shows the government organization's high recognition and support for Fu Dongju's work. In 1997, Fu Dongju retired from the position she loved and devoted her life to.

However, after retirement, Fu Dongju was not idle either. She actively participated in various public welfare undertakings until she died of illness in 2007.