March of the Volunteers
de:Marsch der Freiwilligen fr:La Marche des Volontaires ja:中華人民共和国の国歌 ms:Barisan_Para_Sukarelawan pl:Hymn Chińskiej Republiki Ludowej sr:Марш добровољаца zh-cn:义勇军进行曲 zh-tw:義勇軍進行曲
The March of the Volunteers (Simplified Chinese: 义勇军进行曲, pinyin: Yìyǒngjūn Jìnxíngqǔ) is the national anthem of the People's Republic of China, written in the midst of the Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945) by the noted poet and playwright Tian Han (田汉) with music composed by Nie Er (聂耳). This composition is a musical march.
Origins as National Anthem
March of the Volunteers was written by Tian Han in 1934 for a play he was writing at the time. Popular stories suggest, however, that he wrote it on a tobacco paper after being arrested in Shanghai and thrown into a Kuomintang jail in 1935. The song, with a minor alteration, became the theme song of the patriotic film Sons and Daughters in a Time of Storm (风云儿女, 1935), a story about an intellectual who leaves to fight in the First Sino-Japanese War. It was one of many songs that were promoted secretly among the population as part of the anti-Japanese resistance.
It was used as the national anthem for the first time in an international conference in February 1949 held in Prague, Czechoslovakia. At the time Beiping (now Beijing) had recently come into the control of the Chinese Communists. There was controversy over the line "The Chinese nation faces its greatest peril". Historian Guo Moruo changed the line to "The Chinese people have come to their moment of emancipation" (中国民族到了大翻身的时候).
In June a committee was set up by the Chinese Communist Party to decide on an official national anthem. By the end of August the committee had received 6926 submissions. March of the Volunteers was suggested by painter Xu Peihong (徐悲鸿) and almost unaminously supported by the members of the committee. There was contention, however, over the issue of the third line. On this Zhou Enlai made the conclusive judgement: "We still have imperialist enemies in front of us. The more we progress in development, the more the imperialists will hate us, seek to undermine us, attack us. Can you say that we won't be in peril?" His view was supported by Mao Zedong and on 27 September 1949, the song became the provisional national anthem, more than a month before the founding of the People's Republic of China.
Cultural Revolution and later history
During the Cultural Revolution, Tian Han was swept from power and as a result there was a period of time when The East is Red was used as the unofficial national anthem.
The March of the Volunteers was restored by the National People's Congress in 1978, but with different lyrics; however, these new lyrics were never very popular. On December 4, 1982, the National People's Congress resolved to restore the original 1935 version by Tian Han as the official national anthem. Significantly the current lyrics do not mention either the Communist Party of China nor Mao Zedong and the reversion of the lyrics was symbolic of the downfall of Hua Guofeng and the cult of personality of Mao and the asendancy of Deng Xiaoping.
Although even popular among Nationalists during the Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945), the song was banned in Taiwan until the 1990s.
The anthem is written completely in Vernacular Chinese, while the Republic of China's "Three Principles of the People" is Classical Chinese.
Click to listen:
Lyrics (Current and Original)
- 起来!不愿做奴隶的人们!
- 把我们的血肉,筑成我们新的长城!
- 中华民族到了最危险的时候,
- 每个人被迫着发出最后的吼声。
- 起来!起来!起来!
- 我们万众一心,
- 冒着敌人的炮火,前进!
- 冒着敌人的炮火,前进!
- 前进!前进!进!
Hanyu Pinyin
- Qĭlái! Búyuàn zuò núlì de rénmen,
- Bă wŏmen de xiĕròu zhùchéng wŏmen xīn de chángchéng.
- Zhōnghuá Mínzú dào le zùi wēixiăn de shíhòu,
- Měigerén bèipò zhe fāchū zùihòu de hŏushēng.
- Qĭlái! Qĭlái! Qĭlái!
- Wŏmen wànzhòng yīxīn,
- Mào zhe dírén de pàohuŏ, Qiánjìn!
- Mào zhe dírén de pàohuŏ, Qiánjìn!
- Qiánjìn! Qiánjìn! Jìn!
Translation
- Arise, ye who refuse to be slaves!
- Let us amount our flesh and blood towards our new Great Wall!
- The Chinese nation faces its greatest peril,
- From everyone's oppression shall come our final roar
- Arise! Arise! Arise!
- We are many, but our hearts beat as one!
- Selflessly braving the enemy's gunfire, march on!
- Selflessly braving the enemy's gunfire, march on!
- March on! March on! on!
Lyrics (1978-1982)
|
前进!各民族英雄的人民! |
Qiánjìn! Gè mínzǔ yīngxióngde rénmín, |
March on! People of all heroic nationalities! |
External links
- China's National Anthem (http://www.seaborne-intl.com/sounds/midi/CHINA.MP3)
See also: Historical Chinese anthems