Chiang Fang-liang

Birthday May 15, 1916

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace near Orsha, Vitebsk Governorate, Russian Empire

DEATH DATE 2004-12-15, Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan (88 years old)

Nationality Russia

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1916

Faina Chiang Fang-liang (born Faina Ipatyevna Vakhreva; Фаина Ипатьевна Вахрева; Фаіна Іпацьеўна Вахрава; 15 May 1916 – 15 December 2004) was the First Lady of the Republic of China on Taiwan from 1978 to 1988 as the wife of President Chiang Ching-kuo.

On 15 May 1916, Faina was born near Orsha, part of the Russian Empire, then part of the Soviet Union, now in Belarus.

Faina was orphaned at a young age and raised by her older sister Anna.

At age 16, as a member of the Soviet Union's Communist Youth League, Faina worked at the Ural Heavy Machinery Plant in Sverdlovsk, Russian SFSR, where she met Chiang Ching-kuo, her supervisor.

1935

On 15 March 1935, aged 18, Faina married him.

On 14 December 1935, their first son Chiang Hsiao-wen was born in the Soviet Union.

Each of her three younger children were born in different parts of China, reflecting turbulent years as an official of the country.

Faina had four children:

All her children were sent to study in foreign universities - Hsiao-wu to West Germany and the remaining children to the United States.

1936

In December 1936, Joseph Stalin granted Chiang's return to China.

By another account, however, the couple fled fearing Chiang's arrest.

After the couple was received by Chiang Kai-shek and his wife Soong Mei-ling in Hangzhou, they traveled to the Chiang home in Xikou, Zhejiang, where they held a second marriage ceremony.

Fang-liang stayed behind to live with Chiang Ching-kuo's mother, Mao Fumei.

She was assigned a tutor to learn Mandarin Chinese, but she learned the local Ningbo dialect of Wu Chinese instead.

She reportedly got along well with Mao Fumei and did her own housework.

When Chiang Ching-kuo became President, Fang-liang rarely performed the traditional roles of First Lady, partly due to her lack of formal education; her husband also encouraged her not to get into politics.

She largely stayed out of the public spotlight, and little was ever known of her in an anti-communist atmosphere in the government.

She never returned to Russia, and traveled abroad only three times in the last 50 years of her life, all to visit her children and their families.

1988

All three sons died shortly after Ching-kuo's death in 1988: Hsiao-wen in 1989, Hsiao-wu in 1991, and Hsiao-yung in 1996.

Fang-liang then lived in the suburbs of Taipei.

She received occasional visitors, such as some prominent politicians who went to pay their respects every few years.

In the Taiwanese media, if she ever received coverage, she was depicted as a virtuous wife who never complained and endured her loneliness with dignity.

1992

In 1992, she received a visit from a Belarusian delegation.

2004

Chiang died of respiratory and cardiac failure stemming from lung cancer at the Taipei Veterans General Hospital on 15 December 2004, at the age of 88 (or 89 according to East Asian age reckoning).

Chiang's funeral was held on 27 December 2004, with President Chen Shui-bian and Vice President Annette Lu in attendance.

Kuomintang politicians Wang Jin-pyng, Lin Cheng-chih, P. K. Chiang, and Ma Ying-jeou draped her casket with the Kuomintang party flag, and Kuomintang party elders Lee Huan, Hau Pei-tsun, Chiu Chuang-huan, and Shih Chi-yang draped her casket with the ROC national flag.

Chiang was cremated and her ashes taken to her husband's temporary mausoleum in Touliao, Taoyuan County (now Taoyuan City).

They were buried together in the Wuchih Mountain Military Cemetery.