You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Rumors had it that the Li Clan's CEO, Gao Fujun, had taken up two places. The one who was lacking was because he was too ugly, so he didn't dare to show it to others.Everyday, he would walk around holding the little girl's hand and watch movies. When necessary, he would stretch out his hand to break the peach blossoms behind the little woman's back, happy to not be together.Only then did people find out that Boss Li was not ugly at all. That little woman had picked up a treasure from the good fortune she had accumulated in her previous life.
A young Chinese woman, Zhen-Li—raised to observe the party line, including its one-child-per-family doctrine—falls in love with and marries a Christian, and adopts his faith. Though the couple downplays their Christianity in an effort to survive, Zhen-Li’s family is appalled, and she and her husband are ostracized. When she becomes pregnant for the second time and refuses to have an abortion, the persecution begins in earnest. Zhen-Li’s parents, under pressure from the government, pay to have Zhen-Li kidnapped and the baby aborted. It is then Zhen-Li decides she must live up to her name—Truth—and take a firm stand for her faith, regardless of the consequences, and so she begins to regularly teach children about Zhu Yesu (Lord Jesus) and to distribute Christian literature every chance she gets. Based loosely on the life of Christian magazine editor Li Ying, currently serving a ten-year prison sentence in China, the story of Yang Zhen-Li tells the desperate tale of her incarceration and separation from her family, as she continues to minister to other prisoners, and even to her guards.
None
Selected, peer reviewed papers from the 2014 3rd International Conference on Applied Materials and Electronics Engineering (AMEE 2014), April 26-27, 2014, Hong Kong, China
None
None