As the royal family of the last dynasty, Puyi's younger brother Pujie had a lot of helplessness. Unable to decide the marriage, he was arranged by Japan to have a political marriage in an attempt to control Pujie. The Japanese did not expect that the elaborate conspiracy marriage had become a warm color in his life. No matter under what circumstances, his wife never thought of giving up on herself, which made Pujie very moved.
On January 8, 1937, Pujie was arranged by the Japanese to go on a blind date with a Japanese woman named Saga Hiroshi. She was the granddaughter of the Marquis Saga Gongtengō, a close relative of the royal family, and was very intelligent and studious from an early age. Thanks to her family's enlightened thinking, she received a good education and graduated from the Japan Women's Academy of Advanced Studies. Saga Hiroshi is gentle and virtuous, knowledgeable and dali, 7 years younger than Pujie. Whether the two look at each other or not, they must get married and cannot resist. The purpose of the Japanese was to control Pujie, thereby threatening Puyi and better plundering China.
More than half a month later, the puppet Embassy in Japan announced the engagement of Pujie and Saga Hao. On March 6, the two held an engagement ceremony. On April 3, they held a wedding at the Military Hall in Tokyo, less than three months after the two had known each other. At that time, King Takeda Palace Hengde of the Japanese imperial family attended the wedding with the princess, and the puppet Manchukuo sent the minister of finance, Xi Qia, to attend the wedding of the two. Many people are not optimistic about this political marriage, but the result is very surprising to many people.
Soon, Pu Jie returned to Changchun with his newlywed wife, which was Saga Hao's first time in China, full of curiosity about everything in China. Married to her husband, she changed her name to Aisin Kyora Hiroshi.
On March 1, 1938, the Kwantung Army forced Puyi to sign the Imperial Succession Law, and it happened that Saga Hao was pregnant. The agreement stipulates that if Puyi dies, the throne will be inherited by Pujie, and if Saga Hao gives birth to a boy, he will be the heir to the throne of Japanese descent, because Puyi has no sons. At that time, "China will be won by the Japanese." As a result, she gave birth to a daughter, and the Japanese conspiracy was foiled. Later, Saga became pregnant again, and the Japanese lit up hope again. In the end, she gave birth to another daughter, and the Japanese's calculations were completely out of the question.
After Japan surrendered, Saga Hiroshi, Puyi, Pujie, and others fled to Tonghua Da chestnut ditch. Subsequently, Puyi and Pujie prepared to flee to Japan by plane, where they were arrested and imprisoned by the Soviet Red Army, after which the two brothers have been reformed in the war criminals management center. Saga and her younger daughter traveled around and returned to Japan in 1947, where the eldest daughter lived in her maternal grandfather's house in Tokyo. In 1955, the youngest daughter missed her father very much and wrote a letter to Premier Zhou. Under the care of the Prime Minister, she was able to correspond with her father.
In 1960, Puyi and Pujie were granted amnesty, and Saga Hao returned to China with his younger daughter to reunite with her husband who had been separated for many years, and the eldest daughter was no longer alive. Since then, the family has lived a peaceful life in China. In the same year, she became a Chinese citizen and became a Chinese. On June 20, 1987, Saga Hiroshi died of kidney disease in Beijing at the age of 73.