A report on New Life Movement, Blue Shirts Society and Chiang Kai-shek
Chiang Kai-shek as head of the government and the Chinese Nationalist Party launched the initiative on 19 February 1934 as part of an anti-Communist campaign, and soon enlarged the campaign to target the whole nation.
- New Life MovementThe campaign proceeded with help of the Blue Shirts Society and the CC Clique within the Nationalist Party, and Christian missionaries in China.
- New Life MovementThe Blue Shirts origins can be traced to the Whampoa Clique of 1924 - professional military officers - many of whom had sworn personal loyalty to Chiang Kai-shek, as well to the ideals of Sun Yat-sen's Three Principles of the People.
- Blue Shirts SocietyIts scheme of forging a movement for a new culture was adopted by Chiang, and on 19 February 1934, he announced the New Life Movement at a meeting in Nanchang.
- Blue Shirts SocietyIn an effort to unify Chinese society, the New Life Movement was launched to encourage Confucian moral values and personal discipline.
- Chiang Kai-shekUnder Chiang's rule, there also existed the Blue Shirts Society, which was largely modelled on those of the Blackshirts in the National Fascist Party and the Sturmabteilung of the NSDAP.
- Chiang Kai-shek1 related topic with Alpha
Kuomintang
0 linksMajor political party in the Republic of China (Taiwan).
Major political party in the Republic of China (Taiwan).
From 1926 to 1928, the KMT under Chiang Kai-shek successfully led the Northern Expedition against regional warlords and unified the fragmented nation.
He and his New Life Movement called for the crushing of Soviet, Western, American and other foreign influences in China.
The Blue Shirts Society, a fascist paramilitary organization within the KMT that modeled itself after Mussolini's blackshirts, was anti-foreign and anti-communist, and it stated that its agenda was to expel foreign (Japanese and Western) imperialists from China, crush Communism, and eliminate feudalism.