World War II was the biggest war in human history. Led by Germany, Japan and Italy, they launched a series of wars of aggression. Germany fought all the way from Poland to the Soviet Union, and China was not the only battlefield in Japan. In 1941, after World War II completely started, the battlefield in China entered a difficult period.
Japan and the United States also launched a war in the Pacific Ocean. In order to prevent the main Japanese invaders from entering the Pacific Ocean, the United States began to aid China. In 1941, Claire? Lee? Chennault founded the Flying Tigers, which made up for the weakness of air combat in China.
On December 2th of the same year, 1 Japanese planes invaded Kunming, and the Flying Tigers went out for the first time and won a victorious battle. The battlefields of the Flying Tigers involved China, Myanmar and India, and they fought for more than seven months, shooting down more than 4 enemy planes at the cost of losing 61 planes and 26 pilots in the air.
But in July 1942, the Flying Tigers were disbanded, and most American pilots returned home. Only a few pilots who had deep feelings for China stayed in China to continue the war of resistance. Mu Airen was one of them. After returning to the United States, he was worried about China and returned with his wife.
He helped the Anti-Japanese War and worked as an English teacher in Fujian. He and his wife gave birth to a child in China, but after the end of War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression, another war broke out, and Mu Airen had to take the child back to the United States. But what is Mu Airen's child? Born and raised? Americans in China.
Although his native language is English, he has retained a Fujian dialect, and his childhood memories are always good. He always wanted to return to China, but the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and the United States was after the 197s. For various reasons, he never got a visa until 1988, when he took his two daughters, Mu Aihua (Charlotte? Mcginnis) and his sister Mu Aizhong came to China.
The names of the two daughters are very allegorical. In love? Aihua? Together is it? Love China? It can be seen that Mu Airen's family has a deep connection with China. Mu Aihua's family settled in Nanjing, and they began to receive Chinese education. They also joined an art troupe to study China opera, which also laid a foundation for Aihua's performing arts.
In her teens, she began to learn crosstalk again. In 1995, due to her father's work, Mu Aihua's family moved to Beijing. At that time, there were not many foreigners in China, and there were even fewer foreign children. Every time Mu Aihua appeared, a bunch of people stared at her.
Later, a variety show on TV needed a funny show, so people were selected from major opera troupes. They took a fancy to Mu Aihua. She was on CCTV's Zhengda Variety Show? Smile tea garden? Playing Dr. Tea, this little American girl also entered the hearts of China audience.
Since then, she has been the host of CCTV, and she has also appeared in some TV dramas, such as "Zodiac" starring Jackie Chan. However, Mu Aihua's mother is keen on public welfare undertakings, and under what she has heard and heard, Mu Aihua has also become very interested in public welfare undertakings.
She has presided over many types of public welfare, and Aihua has been paying attention to and supporting blind children and out-of-school children in Shaanxi, Jiangsu and other places for a long time with her mother. For Aihua, who is well educated, helping more children create better educational conditions has become an inseparable part of her life.
Although Mu Aihua has an American face, her heart is pure China.