Caught up the fervor of the
Chinese Communist Revolution, she abandoned her plans to study at university and took a job at the
Gansu Daily newspaper, the official newspaper of
Gansu Provincial Committee of the Chinese Communist Party. Her husband, fellow journalist Wang Jingchao, wrote several critical essays at the height of the
Hundred Flowers Campaign. With the launch of the subsequent
Anti-Rightist Campaign, Wang was attacked for these statements, and she was condemned by association. The two were sent to separate
labor camps, where Wang eventually died. He Fengming was released, briefly imprisoned again during the
Cultural Revolution, and finally
rehabilitated. In the early 1990s she published a memoir,
My Life in 1957. ==Production==