Wang Ming

Politician

Birthday May 23, 1904

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Jinzhai, Anhui, Qing dynasty

DEATH DATE 1974, Moscow, Soviet Union (70 years old)

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1904

Wang Ming (May 23, 1904 – March 27, 1974) was a senior leader of the early Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the mastermind of the famous 28 Bolsheviks group.

On May 23, 1904, Wang Ming was born in Jinzhai, Anhui, as Chen Shaoyu to a poor peasant family.

1920

In 1920, he entered the Zhicheng Elementary School in Gushi County.

Wang then entered the Third Agricultural School of the Anhui Province, which was founded by the revolutionary Zhu Yunshan.

Zhu had a strong influence on the school's students, introducing many progressive journals and books such as New Youth and Communism ABC.

In the school, Wang would encounter another strong influential figure in his life, A Ying (Qian Xinchun), his teacher.

A Ying would teach Wang about Vladimir Lenin and Chen Duxiu.

During his school years, Wang was also active in the political movement.

He led boycotts of Japanese products and corrupt elections.

1924

After his graduation in 1924, Wang enrolled in the Wuchang Business School, where he studied for a year.

There he published several articles on revolution and communism.

That same year he joined the May 30 Movement, which involved strikes and protests against imperialism during the Northern Expedition in Wuchang.

In the summer of 1924, Wang joined the CCP.

1925

In November 1925, the CCP sent Wang to Moscow Sun Yat-sen University in Russia.

During this time, Wang mastered both the Russian language and Marxist–Leninist theory, becoming known by the Russian name Ivan Andreevich Golubev (Иван Андреевич Голубев) or simply Golubev.

It was also during this time that Wang encountered his first major political adversary, Ren Zhuoxuan.

Ren was appointed as the secretary of the university's student CCP branch.

Eventually Wang's eloquence won over Ren's authoritarian style in various debates.

1926

Consequently, in April 1926, Wang was elected as chairman of the university's CCP branch.

After the election, Pavel Mif, the university's vice president, became fond of Wang.

1927

In January 1927, when Mif came to China as the head of a Soviet delegation, Wang was his interpreter.

After the CCP's split with the Kuomintang (KMT) in 1927, Wang and Mif attended the CCP's 5th National Congress in Wuhan, after which Wang became Secretary for the CCP's Propaganda Department for two months.

Wang was also a part-time editor of the Guidance journal where he published a few articles.

After the July 15 coup in Wuhan, Wang returned to Moscow with Mif.

After the purge of Karl Radek by Joseph Stalin, Mif was appointed as president of Moscow Sun Yat-sen University, and then Vice Minister of the Eastern Department of Comintern.

For his service and loyalty, Wang became Mif's protégé.

Along with other activists such as Zhang Wentian, Bo Gu and Wang Jiaxiang, Wang Ming founded the 28 Bolsheviks group.

They labeled themselves as orthodox communists.

During his time in Moscow, Wang was involved in suppressing an organization of Chinese Trotskyists that had sprung up in the university.

1929

In 1929, Wang, along with the rest of the 28 Bolsheviks, was sent back to China with the goal of taking over the leadership of the CCP.

However, they met strong resistance within the CCP from members such as Zhang Guotao and Zhou Enlai.

They were assigned insignificant positions.

Meanwhile, Wang found comfort in dating a member of the 28 Bolsheviks, Meng Qingshu, who later became his wife.

Wang was then transferred to the Propaganda Department of CCP, where Li Lisan was the incumbent minister.

During a half year from 1929 to 1930, Wang published many articles in the party newspaper Red Flag and magazine Bolshevik, which supported the leftism embraced by Li.

1930

Wang was also a major political rival of Mao Zedong during the 1930s, opposing what he saw as Mao's nationalist deviation from the Comintern and orthodox Marxist–Leninist lines.

According to Mao on the other hand, Wang epitomized the intellectualism and foreign dogmatism Mao criticized in his essays "On Practice" and "On Contradiction".

The competition between Wang and Mao was a reflection of the power struggle between the Soviet Union, through the vehicle of the Comintern, and the CCP to control both the direction and future of the Chinese revolution.

In 1930, when Wang attended a secret meeting in Shanghai, he was promptly arrested.

But Wang was lucky enough to be ignored by the KMT secret police, who had no idea what value this young man might be to them.