A three-minute poem about the anti-fascist war

Seventy years ago, the gunfire at Lugouqiao opened the prelude of China people's resistance to Japanese fascist aggression and the national war of resistance.

After more than eight years of trouble, the people of China finally put out the smoke of war lit by the Japanese invaders in China.

Seventy years have passed, and the Chinese nation has since reversed a century of decline, and ancient China has since moved towards national independence and self-improvement.

If you listen carefully, it seems that you can still hear the sound of guns 70 years ago, the cry of heroic anti-Japanese martyrs, and the neighing of horses in the 800-mile Taihang Mountains.

I have seen some horrible pictures by chance.

The most shocking photo for me is a revolutionary old man's head mounted on a broken stake.

The ants gathered on the stake. The old man seems to have a contemptuous smile on his face and a cigarette butt in his mouth.

Gully-deep wrinkles bloom the greatest brilliance on his thin face like chrysanthemums, and that wisp of heroic soul is immortal. ...

Difficulties and hardships cannot crush the people of China;

Cruel enemies can only inspire the heroic spirit of the Chinese nation to fight to the death.

"The wind is in the throat, the horse is barking, and the Yellow River is roaring ..."

Deafening roar, accompanied by the surging sound of the Yellow River,

Spread to this day. This is the oath of the people of China to carry out the war to the end and the declaration that the Chinese nation will never give in.

It is a vivid and powerful interpretation and display of the spirit of the Anti-Japanese War.