After the war, the prisoners knew that they were doomed to die. Why didn't they resist?
In that fanatical and radical era, many people had an extreme understanding of prisoners of war. In their minds, the word "prisoner of war" is not much different from such nouns as "traitor" and "spy". That is, under any circumstances, being captured is a fear and shame of death. Otherwise, why not kill the enemy or commit suicide? How can a man who is afraid of death and being captured fight resolutely with the enemy in a prison camp? Even if there is some struggle, it is only forced resistance; Because they have been captured by the enemy and educated, they are likely to have "deteriorated". Merit is merit, mistakes are mistakes, and merits cannot be offset ...1June, 954, the superior issued the specific treatment results for these repatriated personnel, and most of the more than 6,400 repatriated personnel left the army. People like Wu Chengde naturally can't stay in the army. He was expelled from the Party membership and military posts and was assigned to Dawa Farm in Panjin, Liaoning Province, which is known as the "Southern Desert". At that time, some volunteers went to Taiwan Province Province, and some returned home after the war. Prisoners of war who returned home were treated unfairly at home, and many veterans were shot and killed themselves. However, many prisoners of war who went to Taiwan Province Province returned to China a few years later and became Taiwanese businessmen. They are very popular! "Yu Jin's Bad Luck" records that Ma once lived in Beijing and met a Taiwanese businessman in a suit and tie. The Taiwanese businessman exclaimed "battalion commander" to him. In Life Only Once, Zhang Chengyuan's excitement at seeing Taiwan Province prisoners go home was recorded. After returning home, Wu Chengde talked to Guo Tie about his party member identity. The latter said: "Only by dying in North Korea can you prove that you are not a traitor." . Over the years, Wu Chengde, like other volunteer prisoners scattered all over the country, has never stopped shouting for his unfair experience. Wu Chengde alone wrote dozens of letters of petition to higher authorities. They just want the organization to give them a fair conclusion. This day has finally arrived. 1980 the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China issued document No.74, Opinions on Re-examination and Handling of Captured Volunteers, which comprehensively and correctly stipulated the re-examination and correct handling methods of captured volunteers.