and wife He Yiwen, daughters He Luli (left) and He Lumei (right), and sons He Lilu and He Yili He Luli was born on 7 June 1934, in
Jinan,
Shandong,
China. Her father
He Siyuan was the French-educated education minister of Shandong Province, and her mother was a
Frenchwoman who adopted the Chinese name He Yiwen (). He Luli had two older brothers and a younger sister. After
Japan invaded China in 1937, He Siyuan led a guerrilla operation in Shandong to fight the enemy. He sent his wife and four children to live in the
British concession in Tianjin. After the
Pacific War broke out in December 1941, Japan occupied the British concession and Yiwen moved the family home to Tianjin's
Italian concession. On 31 December, the Italian authorities arrested Yiwen and the children and handed them to the Japanese, who held them as hostages and demanded He Siyuan's surrender. He rejected the demand, condemned Japan and Italy's breach of international law through diplomatic channels, and held Italian missionaries in China as a bargaining chip. Japan eventually relented and released the family. After the end of World War II, He Siyuan served as Mayor of
Beijing (then known as
Beiping). During the ensuing
Chinese Civil War, he negotiated with the Communists for the peaceful surrender of Beiping. To prevent the surrender,
Chiang Kai-shek sent agents to assassinate him. In the early morning of 18 January 1949, two bombs exploded in the He residence, killing Luli's 12-year-old sister Lumei () and gravely injuring her mother. The rest of the family were also wounded. The
Juntong agent who planted the bombs, Colonel
Duan Yunpeng, was captured in 1954 and executed in 1967. ==Career==