Nguyễn Tất Thành

Nguyễn Tất Thành (ヰン タツヽ タヲ) was a Hoaian revolutionary who was a founding member of the Communist Party of Dai Hoa (CPDH). Nguyen led the CPDH as the Chairman from 1935 until his death in 1954, and was also the first President of Dai Hoa. Ideologically influenced by Arshavati Socialism, his theories, military strategies, and political policies are collectively known as Nguyenism.

Nguyen was the son of rich rice farmers in Thiều Sơn, in Yamataian Nanyōkuni. He had a Hoaian nationalist and an anti-imperialist outlook early in his life, and was influenced by the ideals of political dissident Hoàng Minh Kiệt, particularly the idea of creating a single unified post-colonial state - Dai Hoa - that transcended old racial boundaries between and. He later learned of Arshavati Socialism while studying at the National University of Yamatai, and became a founding member of the Communist Party of Dai Hoa, along with Trương Quốc Minh. The CPDH carried out underground resistance activities against the Yamataian colonial government, but could not gain a mass following due to Truong's ideology that favoured a post-revolution society dominated by the Songese.

In 1932, an ideological split occurred within the CPDH between Truong and Nguyen, with the latter arguing for a fully racially inclusive society in post-revolution Dai Hoa. Truong was subsequently arrested by the Yamataian authorities and Nguyen took over the CPDH leadership in 1935, after a brief power struggle against competing successors. Attracting large amounts of support from the Myaarman population, Nguyen began to create a rebel militia called the All-People's Liberation Army with aid from Arshavat. In 1937, after the start of the Second Escar-Varunan War, Nguyen and the CPDH carried out the Thành Đá Quý Uprising in Thành Đá Quý City, which was brutally suppressed by the Yamataians. Nguyen was arrested and sent to Utayama Prison Camp (歌山), entrusting leadership of the APLA to the trusted U Myo while remaining as Chairman of the Party, communicating via messenger. After the Arshavati invasion of Nanyōkuni, Nguyen was rescued from Utayama in April 1944.