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Edgar
and Helen Snow (second and third left), and fellow writer
Rewi Alley (second right) in the Philippines in 1940.
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The
author with Helen Foster Snow in the U.S.
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HELEN spent some 12 years in China, mostly in the 1930s. She
first arrived in Shanghai in August 1931. The city, then the fifth
largest port in the world, was to have been the first stop in
her travels around the world in search of adventure and gathering
materials for a book. She had already read Pearl Bucks classic
Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about a Chinese farmer, The Good
Earth. Beyond that, however, she knew little about China. She
was the young all-American girl who even brought along
her own golf bag and tennis racket. But she was anxious to learn.
She had a sense of justice and strongly felt the natural and historic
friendship between the Chinese and American peoples. Eager to
be a writer, she first worked at secretarial jobs in Shanghai.
There she met and married American journalist Edgar Snow.
Edgar and Helen both interviewed Mao Zedong, Zhou Enlai and other
leaders of the Chinese Communist Party, as well as many revolutionary
cadres, Red Army soldiers and common people. They were the first
to convey to the world Mao Zedongs message calling on the
Kuomintang to stop the civil war and form a united front to fight
the Japanese aggressors. From the valuable materials they gathered
in several months of travel and interviews, Ed wrote and published
Red Star Over China, and Helen the companion book Inside Red China.
Being the first foreign journalists ever to visit Baoan
and Yanan, their two books were regarded as international
scoops.
During Helens visit to Yanan in the summer of 1937,
she conducted several interviews with Mao Zedong, who spoke to
her about the nature of revolution in China. This
trip was most educational and rewarding for Helen. In the foreword
of Inside Red China, Helen wrote: The rise of revolution
among the multiple millions of China is one of the most interesting
phenomena in the world. It has become a struggle of the greatest
international social and political importance. To have lived in
China during this historic moment is to have felt the forward
movement of one of the mightiest forces of human freedom. It was
a journey of discovery for me of a new mind and a new people,
creating a new world in the heart of the oldest and most changeless
civilization on earth.
Helen left China and returned to the United States in 1941. In
the years following her return, Helens life was not easy
due to the political climate in the US and personal economic hardship.
She wrote over 40 books, mostly on China, but only eight were
published.
I first heard about Edgar and Helen Snow in September 1937, shortly
after the Japanese militarists launched their all-out war against
China. The Snows were living in Beijing, but moved to Shanghai
shortly after Beijings fall. They gave many lectures in
Shanghai about the situation in North China and the United Front
that included the Communist-led Eighth Route Army. Of particular
interest at that time to the Chinese, as well as the world at
large, was information about the Chinese Communists and the guerrillas
under their command, who Ed and Helen had both recently visited.
While I couldnt attend those lectures because of my age,
my father, my elder brother and some other friends told me about
what they had heard and their impressions.
In 1960, Edgar Snow became the first American correspondent to
visit the Peoples Republic of China post-war, thus continuing
his role as a bridge-builder. He arrived in June and stayed for
five months. It was on this occasion that my husband Chen Hui
and I made Snows acquaintance. We were both working in the
Press Department of the Foreign Ministry. As assistant to Director
Gong Peng, I was in charge of organizing and coordinating Eds
entire visit, and Chen Hui interpreted for him during his interviews
with Mao Zedong in Zhongnanhai and Zhou Enlai in Beijing and on
a trip to Miyun Reservoir.
I came to know more about Helen when I met Tim Considine and
Loring Mandel, who came to Beijing in 1986 to interview people
for a film based on Helens book My China Years. As deputy
secretary-general of the Edgar Snow, Agnes Smedley and Anna
Louise Strong Society, I helped set up interviews with Helens
contemporaries Yao Yilin, Kang Keqing and Wang Bingnan. I also
accompanied Tim and Loring to these interviews. Since then, I
have been involved in other projects linked to Helen, such as
translating and publishing her works. Through these projects,
I gained a deeper insight into her personality and philosophy,
her knowledge of Chinese and world history, and her vision for
the future. Though the film project was not realized, Helen was
not discouraged, for she was well armed with a correct and in-depth
understanding of Chinas realities and its people.
In June 1992, when I was in the United States, I called on Helen
at her home in Madison, Connecticut, and met her for the first
time. I told her that I knew Gong Pusheng (Kung Pusheng), who
was once with the YWCA in Shanghai, and that I had worked for
many years under Pushengs sister Gong Peng in the Foreign
Ministry of the PRC. They were both friends of Helens from
the Dec. 9, 1935-movement days. I will never forget the warmth
with which Helen received me. I also took some pictures of her
wearing the batik jacket that Gong Pusheng had given her.
To honor Helens unique and outstanding contribution to
understanding China, the China Literary Foundation conferred on
her the first ever Literary Prize for Contributing to International
Understanding and Friendship on September 20, 1991, the
day before her 84th birthday.
On June 12, 1996, Helen received an award from the Chinese Peoples
Friendship Association with Other Countries for her lifelong dedication
to advancing the cause of US-China relations by building a bridge
of understanding and friendship between the two countries. When
she received the award, she beamed with a smile and tears rolled
down her cheeks at the same time. She said: I love China.
And it is my wish that China get better and better.
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