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Chung Li-ho
Zhong Lihe ((中国語: 鍾理和), otherwise spelled as Chung Li-ho, also known as Chûng Lî-fò or Tsûng Li-fô when transliterated from Hakka); December 5, 1915 – August 4, 1960, was a Taiwan novelist. He was a Liudui Hakka ((中国語:六堆客家人)), born in Gaoshu, Pingtung in 1915, who migrated to Meinong (nearby and also part of the same sub-division of the Liudui 六堆, the Youdui ((中国語: 右堆) 右堆 (六堆)); now Meinong District, Kaohsiung City) in around 1932. Eloping with a woman because their same-surname relationship was taboo in their community, he resided in Shenyang and Beijing on the Chinese mainland - but, like Taiwan, under Japanese rule at the time - between 1938 and 1946. He died of pulmonary tuberculosis at the age of 44 in Meinong whilst revising his last and possibly finest work, a novella entitled "Rain" (中国語: 雨). ==Legacy== There is a Zhong Lihe Memorial Institute ((中国語: 鍾理和紀念館) dedicated to Zhong located in Meinong, Kaohsiung. His life has been dramatized as ''China, My Native Land'' ((中国語:原鄉人); literally: The man from the native land), a 1980 film directed by Li Hsing; of which the eponymous theme song was sung by Teresa Teng. Zhong's eldest son Zhong Tiemin (otherwise spelled as Chung Tieh-min) ((中国語:鍾鐵民)), 1941-2011, was an award-winning writer of fiction and prose.
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