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Where did the jstars go after liberation?
Now the Qiao family is the ninth generation (Qiao Zhiyong is the third generation since Qiao Guifa), and most of them are in Beijing.

1938, the Japanese army entered Qixian county, and the jstars took refuge in Beijing and Tianjin to escape the war.

Most of the descendants of the Qiao family are public officials, belonging to the working class, ordinary and ordinary, but they still attach great importance to education. Of Qiao Zhiyong's eleven grandchildren, except for three who are still engaged in ethnic accidents, the rest are neither in business nor in politics, so they are divided into share capital, and a considerable part is used as education funds. Great-grandchildren, 2 doctors and 3 masters were born out of 20 children, 12 college students.

Extended information:

1948 Before the liberation of Tianjin, Qiao Tiemin sold the property on Chifeng Road where he had lived for nearly 20 years. After moving to Shanghai, he returned to Tianjin and soon moved to Beijing. But jstars didn't forget to follow the shopkeeper for many years.

Mr. Li Hailong, the local reference room of library of baotou, said that 1950, after liberation, Qiao Tiemin, Qiao Yanhe's father, sent people to Baotou in Suiyuan many times to clean up and sort out Qiao's complicated famous businessmen. That winter, he handed over the oil house and flour shop to the workers and sold most of the properties to the country at low prices.