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Taiwan
ChinaPolitics

Chinese spy drama Silent Honour spurs outpouring of praise for ‘hidden martyrs’

‘Sudden surge’ of visitors to memorial park and one agent’s family home comes as series about mainland intelligence operation in Taiwan ends

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Silent Honour is based on real events and uses the names of communist spies who operated in Taiwan at the time. Photo: CCTV
William Zheng
The Chinese public has come out in force to pay tribute to Communist Party undercover agents who perished during the 1940s civil war, inspired by a television drama that gained a passionate following and sparked an outpouring of praise.
The fervour centres on Silent Honour, the first mainland TV series to chronicle the Communist Party’s espionage activities in Taiwan in the war’s final months. It was when one of the party’s major intelligence operations was systematically crushed by the Kuomintang, which had fled to the island after losing the civil war.
At the Unknown Heroes Memorial Square in Beijing’s Xi Shan National Forest Park, people left floral tributes at the statues of intelligence agents Wu Shi, Zhu Feng, Chen Baocang and Nie Xi – Silent Honour’s main characters.
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A park employee told Beijing Daily about “a sudden surge” of visitors to the square in recent days, despite it not being Ching Ming, China’s grave-sweeping festival.

Hundreds of flowers were laid at Wu’s statue. An underground Communist Party member, Wu was a KMT lieutenant general delegated to Taiwan in 1949 to serve as deputy chief of staff of the island’s Ministry of National Defence.

Wu Shi, a member of the underground Communist Party and a KMT lieutenant general delegated to Taiwan in 1949, has been hailed by a Beijing resident as an “unsung hero”. Photo: CCTV
Wu Shi, a member of the underground Communist Party and a KMT lieutenant general delegated to Taiwan in 1949, has been hailed by a Beijing resident as an “unsung hero”. Photo: CCTV

Beijing resident Harry Wang, 35, visited the square on Thursday and said many people had left thank-you notes to Wu, whom he called an “unsung hero”.

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