On May 4, 1920, the first celebrations of the anniversary of the
May Fourth Movement were held across China. Well-known figures such as
Liang Qichao and
Cai Yuanpei published articles speaking highly of the student demonstrations. In the 1920s, amid confrontations between the
Guangzhou government and the
Beiyang government, the Beiyang government prohibited rallies and marches commemorating the May Fourth Movement in
Beijing and
Tianjin, so the center of May Fourth Movement commemorations moved to
Nanjing and
Shanghai. In 1923, the National Student Association notified local student associations of a resolution that each student association was to hold a commemorative rally each year. With the
May Ninth National Humiliation (
五九國恥) and the
May Third incident, the beginning of May began to accumulate anti-Japanese observances, and as the conflict between China and Japan deepened, the May Fourth anniversary became a symbol of anti-Japanese resistance. In 1933, more than a year after the
Mukden Incident, one of the rallies declared May 4 as the "Anniversary of the Movement to Rejuvenate Chinese Culture". Literary Day was originally designated by the
Nationalist government as March 27, in honor of the establishment of the
All-China Resistance Association of Writers and Artists, while Youth Day was originally designated as May 4, in honor of the
Three Principles of the People Youth Corps. The
Shaan-Gan-Ning Border Region Northwestern Youth National Aid Association formally declared May 4 as Youth Day in March 1939.
Mao Zedong wrote an article praising the May Fourth Movement, and the same year, the
Republic of China government designated May 4 as Youth Day. On May 4, 1939, the
Kuomintang (KMT) and the Communists both celebrated the first
May Fourth Youth Day. In 1940 or 1943, the KMT government moved Youth Day to March 29 to commemorate the martyrs of the
Yellow Flower Mound Uprising. The move provoked opposition: for instance, on May 3, 1944,
National Southwestern Associated University held a symposium on the topic of "protecting the May Fourth spirit, carrying forward the May Fourth tradition". During the
Chinese Civil War, the Kuomintang-established observance of Youth Day on March 29 became an occasion for people to express their dissatisfaction with the Kuomintang. The Communist Party took the opportunity to instigate a student movement for "survival, freedom, and peace". In 1944, the KMT government changed the May Fourth observance to Literary Day, and the new observance was celebrated for the first time in 1945. In 1949, the new
People's Republic of China Government Administration Council changed it back to Youth Day, and this difference in observance between the PRC (mainland China) and the ROC (Taiwan) persists to this day. == In Taiwan ==