Background
Rou Shi was born Zhao Pingfu (赵平复) on 28 September 1902 in Ninghai County, Zhejiang province.
柔石
Rou Shi was born Zhao Pingfu (赵平复) on 28 September 1902 in Ninghai County, Zhejiang province.
In 1925 Rou Shi studied briefly at Peking University, but returned to Zhejiang in the spring of 1926, teaching in Hangzhou and Zhenhai.
In 1918 he entered Hangzhou Number. 1 Normal School in the provincial capital Hangzhou. In 1925 he published his first collection of short stories, Mad Manitoba
In the summer of 1927 he returned to his hometown Ninghai and taught at Ninghai High School, a local Communist base.
After the failed Communist rebellion in May 1928, he took refuge in Shanghai, where he was introduced to the leading leftist writer Lu Xun. Together with Lu Xun and others, he cofounded the Morning Flower Society (朝花社), which published several progressive journals.
In January 1929 he succeeded Lu Xun as the editor of the journal Yu Si (语丝). During this period he wrote the novel February and another collection of short stories entitled Hope (希望).
He also translated works by foreign writers such as Maxim Gorky.
In March 1930, the League of Left-Wing Writers was established in Shanghai. Rou Shi attended its inaugural meeting, and became an executive and standing committee member in charge of the League publication Meng Ya (萌芽). He joined the Communist Party of China in May 1930, and published the short story, A Slave Mother (为奴隶的母亲).
On 17 January 1931, while attending a secret Communist Party meeting at the Oriental Hotel in the British concession of Shanghai, Rou Shi was arrested along with other attendees by the British police.
Among the executed were three women, one pregnant. They were executed either by gunshot or by being buried alive.
According to Frank Moraes, Rou Shi was in the latter group, but an article on Xinhua says he was killed by gunshots. On the 100th anniversary of his birth in 2002, Rou Shi"s hometown Ninghai restored his former residence and opened it as a museum in his memory.
In addition, the county opened the newly built Rou Shi Park covering an area of 250 mu.
Executed in February 1931 by the Kuomintang government in Shanghai for his pro-Communist activities, he is considered one of the Five Martyrs of the League of Left-Wing Writers. They were handed over to the Kuomintang government and held in prison for three weeks. On 7 February 1931, the Kuomintang executed 23 Communists in Longhua, Shanghai.
The five members of the Left League executed on that day, Rou Shi, Li Weisen, Hu Yepin, Yin Fu, and Feng Keng, are called the Five Martyrs of the League of Left-Wing Writers by the Communist Party.