Military and National Defence > Establishment and Services
Eighth Route Army
The Eighth Route Army, also known as the 18th Army Group of the National Revolutionary Army of the Republic of China, was a group army led by the Communist Party of China. It was the predecessor of the People’s Liberation Army.
Examples

1 The Eighth Route Army, New Fourth Army and other armed anti-Japanese people carried out the arduous anti-Japanese guerrilla warfare behind enemy lines, carried out the Battle of Pingxingguan, the Hundred Regiments Offensive, and and other numerous operations against the enemy.

2 When the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression broke out in 1937, Zhu De, who held the post of the commander-in- chief of the Eighth Route Army of the National Revolutionary Army (soon renamed the 18th Group Army of the National Revolutionary Army), led the Eighth Route Army to march to the anti-Japanese frontline in north China where they teamed up with the Kuomintang forces to fight against Japanese invasion troops.

3 Under the right command of the Eighth Route Army Headquarters with Zhu De as the leader, the Eighth Route Army won victory one after another in battles in Pingxingguan and so on.

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Japanese Eighth Route Army veteran to witness WWII victory ceremony in Beijing View Translation
BEIJING, Sept. 2 (Xinhua) -- Kobayashi Kancho, 95, finds it difficult to walk. But the Japanese veteran still came to Beijing to attend the ceremony to mark the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II and the victory of the Chinese People's War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression. Kobayashi Kancho was among them 30 Chinese and foreign veterans and civilians who fought for China in the World War II and were granted medals by President Xi Jinping on Wednesday, ahead of the country's grand V-Day celebration. Together with 16 Japanese veterans of the Chinese People's War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression and Liberation War, Kobayashi held talks with Chen Zhijian, director of the research institute of the Eighth Route Army, an armed force led by the CPC during the war. "I feel great honor and happiness being here," Kobayashi said in Chinese, his voice shaking. Chen acknowledged their great contribution to the victory of the Chinese People's War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression. "My father used to fight in the war," Chen said. "Thus it's just like facing him when I sit in front of you." Kobayashi was born in Gunma, Japan in 1919. He inherited a temple from his ancestors and had been a monk since his teenage years. In June 1939, Kobayashi received a military order to join the army. After several months training, he landed in Qingdao, east China's Shandong Province, with the Japanese army in January 1940. He was captured by the Eighth Route Army on June 7, 1941. After capture, Kobayashi tried to commit suicide. However, the muzzle of his machine gun shifted after he pulled the trigger and he survived. Kobayashi was kept by the Eighth Route Army and sent to its command of east Shandong detachment. When he was first taken, he thought they would kill him. But they did not. The Eighth Route Army gave Kobayashi medical help, food and shelter as he recovered. While recuperating, he was given Japanese-language books on Communism and Socialism. At first, he rejected the books. But after growing restless in his small room, he finally cracked them open. He found the books' content well thought out. One day, he met Jiang Kun, a chief agent in the east Shandong detachment of the Eighth Route Army. Jiang, who used to study at the University of Tokyo before Japan's full-scale invasion began during the July 7 Incident of 1937, returned to China and took part in the Chinese People's War of the Resistance Against Japanese Aggression. He spoke fluent Japanese and sometimes talked with Kobayashi about his life in Japan, Kobayashi said. Jiang asked for Kobayashi's help for his work. "He did not force me," he said. Kobayashi witnessed Chinese villages burnt by the Imperial Japanese Army and innocent people killed by the Japanese soldiers. He gradually realized the war initiated by Japan against China was a war of aggression and brought tremendous pain and suffering to the Chinese people. He felt guilty of the Japanese atrocities to the Chinese people. On Sept. 19, 1941, Kobayashi and his fellow Japanese soldiers joined the Eighth Route Army. They distributed anti-war leaflets, wrote slogans and made telephone calls, trying to persuade the Japanese army to surrender. Kobayashi caught the attention of high-level Japanese leaders, who offered a reward for his capture. Thus he was hidden in a cave where he translated the book Historical Materialism into Japanese to be used in anti-war materials. When the war ended in 1945, Kobayashi stayed in Jinan, capital of Shandong Province. He worked at the foreign affairs office and repatriated the war prisoners and the Japanese nationals. In 1946, under the approval of the Organization Department of the Communist Party of China's (CPC) Central Committee, Kobayashi joined the party. In 1953, Kobayashi served as the vice director of the People's Hospital in Fengzhen of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region and married a Japanese nurse there. In December of 1955, Kobayashi and his family returned to Japan with a 100,000 HK dollars subsidy. "I had worked and lived in China for 15 years," he said. "I miss the colleagues and comrades so much." In his early years back in Japan, Kobayashi was under police surveillance, but he eventually found a job at a shipping company and worked until he turned 75. After retirement, Kobayashi served as the chairman of an association of the Japanese veterans of the Eighth Route Army and New Fourth Army. He went around Japan and told of his anti-war experience in China to call on the people to cherish peace. Enditem
Eighth Route Army Cultural Tourism Festival opens in Wuxiang View Translation
The fourth session of the Eighth Route Army Cultural Tourism Festival had its opening ceremony in Wuxiang country, Shanxi province, on June 17, with a theme of "Carrying on the Taihang Mountain spirit and the 8th Route Army culture" and plenty of activities. Eighth Route Army Cultural Tourism Festival opens in Wuxiang Artistic performance on the opening ceremony of Eighth Route Army Cultural Tourism Festival, on June 17, in Wuxiang county, Shanxi province There were artistic performances, a Taihang Mountain Screen Culture and Creativity exhibition, a signing ceremony for Wuxiang investment, the beginning of the "Beautiful Wuxiang" Photography Contest, revolutionary items exhibition, calligraphy and paintings, and the fifth 8th Route Army Cultural Seminar. The activities are also meant to show the unique characteristics and "red" culture of Wuxiang county from various angles and in various ways, Over a few years, this Eighth Route Army festival has become an important way for the county to open more to the outside world through communications and cooperation. Wuxiang county made a historical name for itself as an old revolutionary area during China's formation in the 20th century and an important place for the "Taihang Spirit".
Fifth Eighth Route Army Culture Seminar in Wuxiang View Translation
When the 5th Eighth Route Army Culture Seminar was held, on June 17, in Wuxiang county's Taihang Memorial Hall, in Shanxi province, it pulled in experts from across the country for discussions of Eighth Route Army culture, the Taihang spirit and Wuxiang’s role in the War against Japanese Aggression, with more than 30 papers presented. Sponsors of the seminar were the Party's History Association, Shanxi provincial Party Publicity Dep't, and the provincial Party History Association. The first seminar of this kind was held in 2010, and the following four have brought Wuxiang a lot more attention from many types of people who have begun to recognize its achievements. The seminar is important for the culture surrounding China's Eighth Route Army, giving it a bit of soft (cultural) power in explaining the old revolutionary areas and the changes that have taken place in these areas. Edited by Roger Bradshaw
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