Office1: | Member of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference | ||||||||||
Term1: | 6th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference | ||||||||||
Term Start1: | June 1983 | ||||||||||
Term End1: | April 1988 | ||||||||||
1Blankname1: | Chairman | ||||||||||
1Namedata1: | Deng Yingchao | ||||||||||
Term2: | 3rd National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference | ||||||||||
Term Start2: | April 1959 | ||||||||||
Term End2: | January 1965 | ||||||||||
1Blankname2: | Chairman | ||||||||||
1Namedata2: | Zhou Enlai | ||||||||||
Office3: | Member of the Standing Committee of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference | ||||||||||
Term3: | 5th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference | ||||||||||
Term Start3: | March 1978 | ||||||||||
Term End3: | June 1983 | ||||||||||
1Blankname3: | Chairman | ||||||||||
1Namedata3: | Zhou Enlai | ||||||||||
Term Start4: | 4th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference | ||||||||||
Term End4: | January 1965 | ||||||||||
Predecessor4: | March 1978 | ||||||||||
1Blankname4: | Chairman | ||||||||||
1Namedata4: | Zhou Enlai | ||||||||||
Office5: | Delegate to the 1st National People's Congress | ||||||||||
Term Start5: | September 1954 | ||||||||||
Term End5: | April 1959 | ||||||||||
1Blankname5: | Chairman | ||||||||||
1Namedata5: | Liu Shaoqi | ||||||||||
Zeng Xianzhi | |||||||||||
Native Name: | 曾宪植 | ||||||||||
Native Name Lang: | zh | ||||||||||
Birth Date: | 23 January 1910 | ||||||||||
Birth Place: | Changsha, Hunan, Qing Empire | ||||||||||
Death Place: | Portuguese Macau | ||||||||||
Party: | Chinese Communist Party | ||||||||||
Children: | Ye Xuanning | ||||||||||
Parents: | Zeng Zhaohe | ||||||||||
Alma Mater: | Wuhan Central Military and Political School South China University Yan'an Marxism-Leninism College Central Party School of the Chinese Communist Party | ||||||||||
Module: |
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Zeng Xianzhi (; 23 January 1910 – 11 October 1989) was a Chinese revolutionary and politician.[1]
In the late 1920s and early 1930s, girls in schools was a new thing, but Zeng was a member of the girls' basketball team in school. She became a "student soldier" in a branch campus of Whampoa Military Academy. Zeng was one of the first female soldiers in China during the Chinese Communist Revolution. After the establishment of the Communist State, she spent over 40 years working in the All-China Women's Federation. She devoted her life to the Chinese women's rights movement.
Zeng was born on January 23, 1910, at Baishutang in Changsha, Hunan, with her ancestral home in Xiangxiang (now Shuangfeng County). She was a descendant of Zeng Guoquan, a renowned general in the late Qing Empire and one of three brothers of Zeng Guofan.[2] She had five siblings. Her siblings were, in order of birth: Zeng Xianpu (; 1908-1966), Zeng Xiankai (; 1908-1985), Zeng Xianzhen (; 1911-1997), Zeng Xianzhu (; 1919-1986), and Zeng Xianju . In 1916 she attended Changsha Gudaotian Normal School . Under the influence of Xu Teli, she threw herself into China's revolution. In 1926, she was accepted to the Wuhan Central Military and Political Academy. Whilst still nominally at school she participated in the Northern Expedition.[3]
In 1927, Zeng went to Guangzhou to help organize the Guangzhou Uprising. She joined the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in 1928. She was a member of the CCP underground in Shanghai under "legal" cover as a student of South China University. In May 1929 she was arrested by the Nationalist government for participating in anti-government protests. After her release she pursued advanced studies in Japan.
Zeng returned to China in 1931. In 1937 she worked in Xinhua Daily in Wuhan, capital of Hubei province. Two years later, she was transferred to Guilin as traffic coordinator of the Eighth Route Army. In 1941 she entered the Yan'an Marxism–Leninism College and the Central Party School of the Chinese Communist Party; after graduation, she worked in the Dihou Gongzuo Department of the CCP Central Committee . In the spring of 1946, she attended the Chongqing Negotiations with the Communist delegation. She successively served as secretary of Deng Yingchao and group leader of the Southern Bureau Women's Group . In March 1947, she transferred to the Shanxi-Chahaer-Hebei Border Region and attended the Land Reform Movement .
At the beginning of 1949, Zeng was appointed deputy secretary-general of the First National Women's Congress. This was China's first national congress for women and 500 delegates heard Mao Zedong tell them to increase production and to demand their rights.[4]
After the congress Zeng worked in the All-China Women's Federation until the Cultural Revolution. During the Cultural Revolution, she was called a "big black umbrella" and "alien-class element" by the Communist government, and she was sent to the May Seventh Cadre Schools in Hengshui County, Hebei to be re-educated and to do farm work. In 1974, after seeing his mother's unfair treatment, Ye Xuanning wrote a letter to Mao Zedong who approved Zeng's return to Beijing.[1]
In September 1978, Zeng was elected vice-president of the All-China Women's Federation at the Fourth National Women's Congress. She was a delegate to the 1st National People's Congress, a member of the 3rd and 6th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, and a Standing Committee member of the 4th and 5th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.
On October 11, 1989, she died of illness in Macau.
In 1928, Zeng married Ye Jianying, who later became one of the founding Ten Marshals of the People's Republic of China. They had a son, Ye Xuanning (1938-2016).[5]