Hua Guan wrote an inscription on the little hero Yulai Monument: "1937, the Japanese invaded China, and China waged a national war of resistance. Young and middle-aged people joined the Eighth Route Army and took up guns to fight against the Japanese aggressors. The militia, the elderly, women and children who returned to villages on both sides of the river in eastern Hebei fought tenaciously against the enemy to defend their homes. During the war years, there were many people who stood guard, held red tassels, held small breasts, delivered letters to the Eighth Route Army, made fake mines to confuse the enemy, and led the way in ambush.
Extended data
The Little Hero Rain Comes, formerly known as Rain Comes Without Death, is a Chinese textbook for primary and secondary schools in China, written by Hua Guan. This article tells the heroic story of Yulai's clever and brave response to the Japanese.
Huaguan (1922 —2002), formerly known as Bao Huapu. Rich people in Hebei. Party member, CPC.
1942 graduated from the literature department of North China United University.
From 65438 to 0940, he participated in the revolutionary work, and successively served as an army reporter for the newspaper Salvation, the organ newspaper of the Party Committee of Jidong District, the deputy captain and captain of the literary and art team of the Qianbing Drama Club of the Political Department of Jidong Military Region, the deputy head of the cultural and art troupe of the Jicha-Reliao Military Region, a researcher at the Northeast Lu Xun Art Institute, a composer of the Central Orchestra, and a resident writer of the Beijing Writers Association.