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Soe Thway - Chairman of the Six Hundred Millions, Mao

Soe Thway - Chairman of the Six Hundred Millions, Mao

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The author's unwritten order

Reading can change your life. Books give you strength. They are the torch of life. Books can provide you with good ideas, thoughts, and concepts.

One book that changed the author's life was the biography of Napoleon Bonaparte, the famous world war king. After reading that book, the author developed a desire to strive like Napoleon. A spirit of determination like Napoleon developed. Great expectations and goals like Napoleon developed. That spirit and determination led the author to work hard for many hours, so the author was able to undertake great literary tasks. He was able to compile large, small, and medium-sized English-Burmese dictionaries. The author's wish was that young people should read books that would inspire them.

Among the books that the author wants you to read is the book “Than Shik Ra | Chairman Maw”.

In this book, you will be able to clearly see the diligence, diligence, perseverance, courage, vigor, thoughts, ideas, and behavior of Comrade Mao Zedong, the founder of the People's Republic of China.

Comrade Mao Zedong's words and commands are very worthy of respect and heed.

““Practical action without ideology is like blindness, and ideology without practical action is like profit.” “Leave aside the nonsense and let your brain work.” “Learn to be smart, train to be brilliant, and serve the people.” “Revolution is not a dinner party or an essay. It is not a painting or a crochet. It is a gentle, gradual, and gradual movement.

"It is not about moving forward with consideration, courtesy, honesty, and composure. Revolution is the uprising of one class against another class, resisting and eliminating it."

Throughout the Japanese invasion and the civil war, he gave encouraging words to his comrades. He himself led by example.

Comrade Mao Zedong was a poet, writer, military strategist, philosopher, etc. He was outstanding in many aspects. He was brilliant in composing poetry, but his ideas were profound and he was very skilled in military strategy.

Mao Zedong's poems are still taught in elementary school classes in China today. His strategic and ideological books have spread throughout the world.

"We must have faith in the people. We must have faith in the party. These are the two fundamental principles. If you doubt these two principles, nothing will happen."

"We will not be able to finish it," Mao Zedong said in the famous book of revolutionary thought called the "Little Red Book."

Comrade Mao Zedong was the first Chairman of the Communist Party of China. He served as Chairman of the Party from March 20, 1943 to September 9, 1956, for 33 years and 173 days. Therefore, he is affectionately known as Chairman Mao.

During the guerrilla war, Mao's slogan of "slow and steady attack" was extremely effective. The guerrilla war mottos of "taking the initiative, attacking when the enemy is tired, and closing in on the enemy as they retreat" were concepts that the Red Army valued highly.

How do you see me?

 

A noble person

There were three party leaders who were major opponents of Mao within the party. One was Li Lisheng, who had been fighting against Mao for many years, with the support of the Kuomintang. However, when Mao formed the government, he was appointed Minister of Labor. The second anti-Maoist was Wang Ming. He had even tried to seize power in the early days. He had the support of the Kuomintang. Mao also considered Wang Ming an anti-Party. However, Wang Ming was not a member of the central government.

He was always a member of the committee. Mao even called him "comrade".

The third anti-Maoist was Chiang Kai-shek. Mao's treatment of Chiang was very different from the way Stalin had him follow Trotsky. He marched long distances.

During the retreat, Chen led an armed rebellion within the party. He split the party in two and expelled the opposing factions.

I heard that hundreds were killed. Long March | At the end of the journey, Chiang Kai-shek was summoned by the Central Committee to Yin'an.

He was dismissed. He is said to have remained as the Vice Chairman of the North-West Frontier Province Government.

In 1938, Chiang crossed the border and joined the Kuomintang. Chiang alleged that his bodyguard was shot dead when he tried to prevent him from escaping. However, according to Mao, Chiang's bodyguard was not only not a real gunman, but was still serving as an officer in the army.

After the war, Chen fled to Hong Kong as a deserter. Hearing that Chen was in poor health, he lived with his children in the People's Republic of China.

Mao summoned Chen's surviving wife. Mao said that a wife should be close to Lin in times of trouble, and advised her to go with him to Hong Kong. Chen's wife agreed to go, so he provided her with sufficient financial support and sent her and the children to Hong Kong.

When I asked, Mao confirmed that these facts were correct, and laughed, "And yet... Mr. Dulles still accuses us communists of creating incest and breaking up families," he said.

Bloodthirsty 

During the long revolution, there were many cases where the most serious criminals were not tried and executed without due process of law. Mao was also responsible for this. However, Mao was not bloodthirsty.

“Revolution is like serving dinner, composing an essay, painting a picture, or embroidering a flower with your own imagination. Revolution is gentle, delicate, peaceful, kind, and polite,” he once told the peasant rebels.

Someone who doesn't want to stand out

Mao once submitted a proposal to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China. He proposed that no city or town be named after him, or any other prominent person. He also prevented the celebration of his birthday.

Mao faced fierce opposition within the intolerant Politburo. He also had to make concessions. It is not known that Mao killed his opponents.

A person who abandons class consciousness and class views.

When I was a student, I had the idea that the educated class was the cleanest, and that farmers were the dirtiest.

When I became a revolutionary, I became one with the workers, peasants, and revolutionary soldiers. I became closer to them day by day, and they became closer to me. Only then did the bourgeois and intellectual instincts that had been hidden in me disappear. Only then did I realize that the real dirty people were the intellectuals who had not yet reformed themselves, and that the peasants and working classes, no matter how much dirt they had on their hands and how much dirt was on their feet, were actually the clean ones. Mao once wrote that it was necessary to change the class perspective.

Not separated from the poor

Mao was a man who took his news personally. He spent an average of four months a year in Beijing. During the remaining eight months, he traveled all over the country. He visited the big cities regularly and met with provincial leaders. He kept in constant contact with the grassroots organizations of the Party. He also visited the government's new projects, the common groups, the factory nurseries, kindergartens, and educational labor camps. He would go to the fields and factories without notice or notice and talk to the farmers. He would often eat and drink with them.

Respectful of duty

Although everyone respects him, he has no desire for heroism or fame in magic.

To me, Mao is an interesting person. He is honest and open. He is also happy and cheerful. He is precise in his words.

He speaks openly and lives honestly, like a Chinese farmer.

Mao was not only a good speaker but also a great memory. He was also an excellent writer. He was not particular about his diet. He dressed casually. However, he never forgot his duties. He was tireless and worked tirelessly. He was also skilled in both military and political matters. Therefore, the Japanese respected him as a model for military warfare.

Easily satisfied

Mao was truly content with his life, content with the lives of the Red Army soldiers. During his more than ten years of leadership of the Reds, he had seized many valuables from wealthy individuals, government officials, and tax ministers, but he kept as his personal property the following:

Only a few other items, including a blanket, a mat, and two sets of clothes.

Mao was the leader of the Communist Party, the leader of the Red Army. But like any ordinary Red Army soldier, he wore only a badge with two red stripes on his coat collar.

Mao worked 13 to 14 hours a day, sometimes until midnight. But his health was as strong as steel.

A person with a sensitive heart

Mao was also a man of emotion about an experience. I saw tears welling up in his eyes as he recounted the stories of comrades who had fallen in battle. His voice was deep and hollow as he recounted the losses and sufferings of the Hunan famine and the fighting. Wounded on a front line,

A Red Army soldier once recounted that Mao once took off his coat for a soldier who was wearing a red shirt. When his Red Army soldiers did not have shoes, Mao refused to wear them, a Red Army soldier once recounted.

I consider Hmaw to be a good leader, amiable, respectful, and trustworthy. History has proven my opinions correct.

Snow

(Writer/journalist)

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