Wu Yunduo
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Wu Yunduo | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
吴运铎 | |||||||||
Wu Yunduo in 1940s | |||||||||
| Born | 17 January 1917 | ||||||||
| Died | 2 May 1991 (aged 74) | ||||||||
| Occupations | Engineer, writer | ||||||||
| Chinese name | |||||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 吳運鐸 | ||||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 吴运铎 | ||||||||
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Wu Yunduo (simplified Chinese: 吴运铎; traditional Chinese: 吳運鐸, 17 January 1917 – 2 May 1991) was a Chinese revolutionary, mechanical engineer and writer. He oversaw the development of arms industry for the New Fourth Army during the Second Sino-Japanese War. He was also among the first worker-writers in the People's Republic of China, and was known as "China's Pavel Korchagin".[1]
On 17 January 1917, Wu was born in Pingxiang, Jiangxi Province. His father, Wu Shutang, was a worker at the Anyuan Coal Mine (Chinese: 安源煤矿).[2] At the age of seven, he enrolled at a primary school run by a local coal miners union. Following the 1927 Shanghai massacre, production at the Anyuan Coal Mine fell as the Nationalist government began arresting and executing suspected communists in Pingxiang. In the ensuing financial hardship, Wu left school after completing the fourth grade, and took up manual labor to help support his family.[3]
When the Anyuan Coal Mine closed down in 1930 due to poor operation, Wu and his family moved to their ancestral home in Caidian, Hubei Province. In the following year, they moved to Huangshi, where Wu became an apprentice in the mechanical workshop of the Fuyuan Coal Mine (Chinese: 富源煤矿).[2]