be wholehearted for the public interests
Xin Ren GUI Jia, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ī NR é NGU ǐ Ji ǎ, which means the spirit of serving the public wholeheartedly and ignoring personal interests. From book Yi Ji.
The origin of Idioms
The book Yi Ji: "married in Tushan, Xinren Guijia." Confucius said: "Xinri married a wife. As for Jiari, he went back to flood control and did not harm the public with his own interests."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. What is xinrenguijia today? And lead the yellow dog to the east gate. The poem "Tu Shan" by Zou Rong in Qing Dynasty
be wholehearted for the public interests
body gone and reputation ruined - shēn míng jù bài