China News Service, Hangzhou, July 4th (Guo Qiyu, Ma Xiaoli, Dong Chaojun) 71 years ago, when Martyr Shen Dequan died on the battlefield to resist U.S. aggression and aid Korea, he was only 23 years old, and he did not leave a photo.

For decades, the Shen family has always had a wish to paint a portrait of Shen Dequan.

Now, with the help of the police, this wish has finally come true.

  In June of this year, the Yipeng Police Station of the Qiantang Sub-bureau of Hangzhou Public Security Bureau received a special ID card transfer application. The applicant was 73-year-old Shen Dezheng.

He expressed that he wanted to use his black and white ID card photo when he was young to copy a "posthumous portrait" for his long-lost eldest brother Shen Dequan.

  Martyr Shen Dequan was 21 years older than Shen Dezheng and was born in 1928.

In June 1951, 23-year-old Shen Dequan signed up for the Chinese People's Volunteer Army and became a deputy squad leader.

On November 25 of the same year, he was bombed by enemy planes and died on the battlefield to resist U.S. aggression and aid Korea.

  "My eldest brother and I don't like taking pictures, let alone pictures when we were young. After thinking about it, the police station is our last hope." Shen Dezheng said.

Painter portraits of martyrs.

Photo courtesy of Qiantang Public Security

  After receiving this special application report, Yipeng police station policeman Lang Zhelin was deeply touched.

After inquiring about relevant laws and regulations, she took the initiative to contact Shen Dezheng's family to communicate the call.

After going through the relevant procedures for calling the ID photo, Shen Dezheng got his black and white photo on the spot.

  "Not long before my brother died, I sent a telegram back to my home saying that I wanted to take a look at my photos. I was only 2 years old at that time." Shen Dezheng recalled that although he had a vague impression of his elder brother, from the time he could remember, the elders in the village had Every time I talk about my eldest brother, I always give a thumbs up, "He has an injury on his leg and could not have gone, but he still threw himself into the fight without hesitation."

  "After my eldest brother died, the family kept it from my parents. My parents still looked forward to my eldest brother's return every day. After the war was over, I couldn't hide it anymore..." Shen Dezheng said that when he was a child, he often saw his mother holding the only picture of his eldest brother before his death. , sitting on the threshold of the door wiping tears.

  Later, the family couldn't bear the sadness of the mother, so they secretly hid the photo of the eldest brother.

When my mother died and I took it out, the photo was completely blurred and I couldn't see anything clearly.

This incident has also become a big regret in the hearts of the Shen family.

  In mid-June of this year, when Shen Dezheng's family visited the local cultural center, they saw the name of the eldest brother in the museum.

"Everyone else has photos left, but my eldest brother doesn't." The more Shen Dezheng thought about it, the more uncomfortable he became, so he tried to apply to the police station for his ID photo to draw a portrait of his eldest brother.

  After getting the photos, Shen Dezheng found Martyr Shen Dequan's peers and asked them to help recall the appearance of his eldest brother before his death, and then asked a painter to help with the portrait. Martyr Shen Dequan finally had an appearance.

  According to the staff of the Basic Management Detachment of the Hangzhou Municipal Public Security Bureau, there are currently no laws and regulations on whether the photo of the resident ID card can be used. , "Immediate family members can apply in writing to the police station and present relevant proof of relationship, which the police will generally provide at their discretion."

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