Hu Yaobang joined the communist revolution at an early age as a young teenager and as a supporter of
Mao Zedong. He was persecuted many times by the communist cadres of the faction returning from the former-
Soviet Union, who controlled the communist leadership and had the real power. Once
Mao Zedong was removed from power for good shortly before the beginning of the
Fourth Encirclement Campaign, his supporters were persecuted once again and this time Hu Yaobang's luck seemed to have run out: he was sentenced to death and just before the beginning of the
Long March, he and others were on their way to be beheaded. However, a powerful local communist commander named Tan Yubao (谭余保, 1899 - January 10, 1980) intervened at the last minute, thus saving Hu's life, but because of Hu's support of Mao, he was deemed as unreliable and ordered to join
Long March so that he could be placed under surveillance.
Despite distrust from top leadership, Hu remained loyal to the communist cause and attempted to prove himself at every opportunity when fighting their nationalist (
KMT) enemy. Hu Yaobang was seriously wounded at the Campaign of Xiang River, where the Chinese Red Army was disastrously defeated. However, the communist field medic teams chose not to help Hu and left him in the battlefield to die on the side of the road. Luck was on Hu's side when a childhood friend of his, a Chinese Red Army commander, happened to be passing by. Hu called out his friend's nickname to ask for help, and the friend helped him to catch up with the retreating main force of the Chinese Red Army. Thus Hu was able to get treatment for his wounds.
Hu Yaobang's luck seemed to have run out again after the
Long March when he was forced to march with the communist leader
Zhang Guotao's 21,800+ strong forces to cross the
Yellow River in a futile attempt to expand the communist base westward in
Shaanxi and to link up with the former-
Soviet Union, or at least with Xinjiang under the reign of warlord
Sheng Shicai, who was still allied with communists and the former-
Soviet Union. Zhang Guotao's forces was soundly defeated by the local nationalist warlords, namely, the
Ma clique. Hu Yaobang, along with the future defense minister of the
PRC, and the future colonel general of
PLA, Qin Jiwei, became two of the thousands prisoners-of-war captured by
Ma clique's forces.
Compared with thousands of Chinese Red Army prisoners-of-war captured by
Ma clique's forces which subsequently executed most of the prisoners-of-wars, luck proved to be once again on Hu Yaobang's side when he, along with Qin Jiwei, were among 1,500 prisoners-of-war whom
Ma Bufang decided not to execute, but instead, used as slave laborers. As
Chiang Kai-shek pressured
Ma Bufang to contribute more of his troops to fight
Japanese invaders,
Ma Bufang decided that instead of using his own troops, he would instead send the 1,500 Chinese Red Army prisoners-of-war as conscripts. Since the marching route had to pass the border of the communist base, Hu Yaobang and Qin Jiwei seized this opportunity to return to the communists and organize a planned to escape in secrecy. As they approached the border of the communist base in
Shaanxi, the escape took place as planned and was a success: out of the total 1,500, more than 1,300 had successfully returned to
Yan'an. Mao Zedong personally welcomed these returning communists and Hu Yaobang was once again back in the communist camp, where he would remain for rest of his life, though the political persecution would continue, and nobody, including Hu Yaobang himself had expected that the political persecution would come from the very communist leader Hu Yaobang once firmly supported.