(Redirected from Zhang Mintian)
'Zhang Wentian' () (
1900–
July 1,
1976), also known as Luo Fu, was the
General Secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) from
1935 to
March 20,
1943.
A native of Pudong
Shanghai, Zhang joined the CPC in 1925 and was sent to study at
Moscow Sun Yat-sen University in
Moscow, which was set up under
Kuomintang's founder
Sun Yat-sen's policy of alliance between the
Soviet Union and CPC to train Chinese revolutionaries and named after him. It was there Zhang came to know
Wang Ming and play an active role in the following group
28 Bolsheviks.
Around 1930 Zhang and his fellows in 28 Bolsheviks such as Wang and
Bo Gu returned to China to take charge of the CPC with support from their mentors in
Moscow, and they won the power struggle with
Li Lisan who was in charge of the CPC at that time. Zhang was appointed as Minister of the Propaganda Department, Interim Member and then Standing Member of the
politburo of the CPC. Owing to
28 Bolsheviks being immature and extremists in revolution, the CPC suffered from great losses in cities under their direction, which resulted in Zhang and other prominent figures retreating to the CPC base in
Jiangxi in 1933. As they applied the same policy, defeat was inevitable and the
Long March began.
Perhaps witnessing too many heavy casualties made Zhang turn over to think about the right way of revolution in China, and as a result he and
Wang Jiaxiang and
Yang Shangkun, other prominent figures of 28 Bolsheviks, defected to
Mao Zedong's camp in
Zunyi Conference during the
Long March. It was at this conference that
Bo Gu and military advisor from
Comintern Otto Braun or Li De were discharged from their command in the military to Mao. As a compromise, Zhang was appointed as General Secretary of the CPC to replace
Bo Gu although Mao received support from most senior party and military leaders.
When Zhang reached
Yanan, he was in charge of ideology and propaganda work for which in
1938 he wrote a book, ''Youth Accomplishment'' (), which greatly influenced the youth. Although most of the time he acted like a puppet, and he pledged his allegiance to Mao during Mao's power struggle with
Wang Ming and
Zhang Guotao, this could not change his fate of removed from the standing committee and his position taken by Mao Zedong in the 7th National Congress of the CPC in
1945.
After the end of Chinese anti-Japanese War, Zhang was sent to
Manchuria with
Lin Biao,
Gao Gang and
Chen Yun to set up a base for CPC resistance to
Kuomintang.
After the establishment of the
People's Republic of China, he became the Chinese Ambassador to
Soviet Union and Under Secretary of the Foreign Ministry. He was disgraced in the LuShan Meeting in 1959 because he criticized Mao Zedong's
Great Leap Forward. Zhang and Defence Minister
Peng Dehuai, Chief of Staff Huang Kecheng and CPC General Secretary of
Hunan Province Zhou Xiaozhou were labelled as an anti-CPC group and stripped of CPC membership. Zhang did not survive the persecution of the
Cultural Revolution and died in 1976 in exile. He wrote to Mao asked permission to go to Beijing for Medical treatment while he had heart disease and was hospitalized in a a hospital even did not have oxygen in Wuxi, Jiangsu Province. Mao refused his petition to go to Beijing. He was posthumously rehabilitated in
1978.
Zhang was a versatile scholar, expert in
Marxism, western history and philosophy, and wrote and translated many articles in these fields.