In 1934, after the Central Red Army suffered a major loss through the Xiangjiang Battle, how did the future military move, affecting the hearts of every general. Is it Guizhou, where the enemy's military strength is weak, or go straight to Xiangxi as originally planned? According to Zheng Xiang, director of the Passage Memorial Hall, "At that time, in order to prevent the central Red Army from meeting with the Red Second and Sixth Army, hundreds of thousands of enemy troops had already entered positions north of the Passage, and a more dangerous situation was about to come." At a critical juncture, Mao Zedong suggested that the Central Red Army abandon the original plan of rendezvous with the Red Second and Red Sixth Army in the north and immediately turn west to Guizhou, where the enemy's strength is weak. Bogu and Li De and other "left" leaders, regardless of the danger of the Red Army's destruction, insisted on going north to Xiangxi as originally planned to meet with the Second and Sixth Legion. This caused the highest leadership of the Central Committee to discuss the direction of the Central Red Army. On December 12, the Central Committee temporarily decided to convene an emergency meeting within the corridor to focus on the direction of the strategic transfer of the Red Army. Comrade Mao Zedong advocated that the troops should abandon the original plan, change the strategic direction, and immediately turn west to Guizhou, where the enemy is weak, and must not go north again! He said in an image: "Why don't we just avoid the reality and dump the strong enemy in front of us and go to Guizhou. Why do we have to drill the pocket? The road is facing the sky, and each side is gone!" Most comrades such as Zhou Enlai, Zhang Wentian and Wang Jiaxiang who attended the meeting approved and supported Mao Zedong's proposition. On December 13, the Central Red Army transferred two routes westward in the passage: all the way into Jingxian (now Jingzhou Miao and Yi Autonomous County), the new factory, Pingcha, and then two routes into Guizhou; all the way into Guizhou Hongzhou, to Liping, avoiding the encirclement of the enemy's heavy troops. Facts have proved that the decision to transfer troops was the only correct choice for the Central Red Army to escape the danger under the circumstances, avoiding the devastating fate that the Red Army might suffer from in the north to Xiangxi as originally planned, and opening up a way for the Party and the Red Army. #Christmas atmosphere around #Dream travel destination #New opening of the city #Immersive winter