On 1909, I made this ... emperor of China ... this kindness. ...
19 1 1 year in China,191year ...191year in China. I abdicated immediately.
1924, Feng Yuxiang forced our royal family to move out of the Forbidden City by force, and then I went to Tianjin. From twenty to twenty-seven, I lived in Tianjin for seven years. Later, there were some conflicts between the China army and the Japanese army, and Japan occupied the three northeastern provinces of China by force.
I was in Tianjin at that time, and something strange and dangerous happened. One day, someone gave me a basket of fruit. When I opened it, it was a basket of bombs! Later, Kashii Kohei came. He said that Tianjin was too dangerous and advised me to go to Lushun. ...
At that time, we went to Fengtian to inspect that thing ... it was probably made by them (Japanese). Anyway, we can't go out by ourselves.
Ten years of freedom has nothing to do with me! That's a monkey show!
It was the time to go to Fengtian, because my ancestral grave was in Fengtian, very close, and I wanted to go at that time, but Yoshioka said I couldn't go! Said it was this ... now the emperor of Manchukuo can't go to his ancestral grave!
Listen to this, Yoshioka. Tell me, this is the order of Commander Shui Mu! This should be in the era of Commander Shui Mu. You ask what year this year is. I don't remember this.
No one threatened me at all, and no one told me anything. It was entirely my own initiative. I told the truth what I knew!
Extended data
The first half of my life mentioned Puyi's monologue at the trial in Tokyo on page 328.
On August 1946, Puyi attended the Far East International Military Tribunal as a witness. In his testimony, he claimed that he was completely at the mercy of the Japanese occupation authorities during his tenure as emperor of Manchukuo, and he had no personal freedom and no corresponding rights and dignity as the head of Manchukuo. He was taken to Inner Manchuria by the Japanese Kwantung Army.
However, after handing it over to the people of China and the government of China, Puyi admitted that, for fear of being investigated by the China government in the future, she passed on some responsibilities (including how to get to Inner Mongolia) to the Japanese side when testifying, and she had reservations in some places involving the responsibilities of both parties. ?
1950 On July 30th, when the Soviet Union informed Puyi to be extradited to China, it once again asked the interpreter Bermenkuf to stay in No.45 asylum in the Soviet Union? [59]? . /kloc-in August, 2000, Puyi and 263 other Manchukuo "war criminals" were handed over from the Soviet government to the China government in Suifenhe, and sent to Fushun War Criminals Management Office for ideological re-education and labor reform for about ten years. The number is 98 1.
In the thirty-fifth year of the Republic of China (1946), at the turn of spring and summer, the Soviet internal affairs department began to summon a series of ministers of the puppet Manchukuo below Puyi. Puyi didn't know why the Soviet side did this at first, and he didn't understand until August when the Soviet side informed him to testify in the Far East International Military Tribunal.
Puyi went to Japan under the escort of the Soviet military. Puyi stated in court the plan and implementation process of Japanese imperialism's enslavement of Manchuria. He described in detail how Kashii Kohei, the Japanese garrison commander in Tianjin, forced him to go to Lushun after the "September 18th Incident", how Ban Yuan Kiyojiro, the chief of staff of the Kwantung Army, threatened him to go from Lushun to Changchun as the "Emperor of Manchukuo", and how he was monitored by Japanese imperialists and had no right or even personal freedom.
When Puyi accused the Japanese of killing his wife Tan Yuling, her emotions began to get out of control and she slapped the person on the witness stand with her hand. When talking about the emperor's artifact sword and mirror that Hirohito gave him, Puyi couldn't restrain his excitement again: "When I brought these things home, my family cried.
This is a disgrace to my generation. The defense lawyers of Japanese war criminals believe that this is an attack on the ancestors of the Japanese emperor. Puyi replied, "I didn't force them to regard my ancestors as their ancestors!" " This sentence caused a burst of laughter.
From August 16, Puyi appeared in court for eight consecutive days, setting a record for the longest single testimony in the Far East International Military Tribunal. After testifying, he returned to the shelter and continued his special captive life. 1950 On July 30th, Su sent a notice of returning to China to Puyi. Even so, Puyi expressed his wish to stay in the Soviet Union to Bier Mintoff, the translator of the 45th Special Prisoner of War Shelter. 1950 July 3 1 day, Puyi boarded the train to return home.
References:
Baidu Encyclopedia-My First Half Life
Baidu Encyclopedia-Yi Fu