Wu Xinren


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Wu Xinren (: 吳信任 ; : 吳信任 ; 24 July 1898 – 3 December 1934), also rendered Hhu Xinzen, was the of the militant  White Lotus, designated as a  by the Tianlong Dynasty.

He was a Longzhouen and a member of an affluent family. Wu's father was 吳陽靖 Wu Yangjin, a Hokanese and owner of two. His mother, 章慧儀 Zhang Huiyi, was from a middle-class family in Zhongjing, Longzhou. He was born in Zhongjing and studied at the military academy in town until 1921, when he devoted himself entirely to the cause of the White Lotus branch in Zhang'an. He was in good terms with the organization's leader, Bai Yingming, and due to this connection he rose to the status of 副領導 Fùlǐngdǎo "Vice Leader", which he used to funnel arms, money, and newcomers into the society. In fact, he was in charge of the society's under the  Seng Xinju (僧信據 "Monk Xinju").

After masterminding the first large-scale rebellion in Longzhou, he was marked as a and was placed a  by the Tianlong Emperor. Thus, he sneaked into Kaulon to administrate the organization's Hokan branch, only to return to Longzhou for aiding the resistance at the Battle of Nanmen, where he was bestowed highest akin to an. He was killed by an air strike during the same war, and his body posthumously buried at the Grand National Mausoleum of Sontshin. His has been the subject of up to eight instances of  as of 2020, all from distinguishable political motivations. It is consequently still debated on the All-Citizens' Council, whether or not his remains should better return to Longzhou.

It is presumed that there are still active remnants of White Lotus to this day, effective in both Longzhou and Hokan, but no concrete evidence has been gathered. Dubious reports from infiltrators of these groups claim Wu Xinren has a around him. In Hokan, he is generally perceived as a disdainful figure, whereas the history of the White Lotus is obscured.