Introduction to the iron statue of Wang Jingwei and his wife: In the corner of the courtyard, there is a pair of kneeling stone statues, a man and a woman, both naked from the waist up. The posture is quite similar to the iron statue of Qin Hui and his wife in the Yue Temple in West Lake. The inscription on the inscription reads: We are husband and wife, especially traitors, public enemies of the people, and the whole country shares the same hatred. The man's name is Jingwei, the scum of the Wang family, and the woman's name is Bijun, the demon of the Chen family. He took a thief as his husband and sold himself into a Japanese slave. Cutting stone portraits, kneeling on the road, everyone reviled, shameful to all kinds of people, smelling bad to the world, and filthy for eternity. The twenty-ninth year of the Republic of China. This pair of kneeling statues turned out to be those of Wang Jingwei and his wife Chen Bijun. At that time, Wang Jingwei defected to Japan and became China's number one traitor. After the Japanese army invaded Taizhou, the stone statues and stone tablets were smashed and thrown into wells. After the liberation, the Taizhou people dug it out of the mud in the well, reassembled it, and placed it here. The people placed the kneeling statue in the corner of the courtyard of Qi Jiguang Memorial Hall, which has a contrasting meaning. It means Qi Jiguang and Wang Jingwei. One defended the country against the Japanese and was admired by later generations. The other defected to the Japanese and became a traitor and was reviled by all the people.

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