CHINAHOY

HOME

2013-January-9

The Inclusive Spirit of Soong Ching Ling

My colleagues and I have never forgotten the things Soong taught us. We have inherited her cause, and will carry it forward into the future. We will ensure the CWI and the Shanghai Soong Ching Ling Foundation continue to be steadfast protectors of the rights of women and children everywhere.

 
Lu Ping speaks at a charity event for a mother and infant healthcare program jointly sponsored by the Shanghai Soong Ching Ling Foundation and the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai. 

 

A Champion of International Friendships

To gain more international support for China’s resistance against the Japanese invasion, Soong founded the China Defense League in 1938. Later it was renamed the China Welfare Institute. The China Defense League was based in Hong Kong in order to attract foreign members. Soong established contact with many international figures of eminence, including George Bernard Shaw, Agnes Smedley, Jawaharlal Nehru, Paul Robeson and Pearl S. Buck. With help from Soong, a number of them ventured into the liberated area of China, and participated in the war against Japanese invaders. Edgar Snow, a famed American journalist, owed much to Soong for arranging his successful interviews in Yan’an, which allowed him to write his best-selling Red Star over China.

Some, including Georges Hatem and Hans Müller, became directly involved in Chinese people’s fight against Japanese aggression. Others, such as Dr. Norman Bethune, even sacrificed their lives for China’s revolutionary undertaking.

Soong was always kind and amicable in her communications with foreign friends and never put on airs of officialdom or doctrinarism. Although she liked to talk politics, she never gave the impression of being distant or abstract. She was, in short, a consummate communicator.

Soon after the founding of New China, in order to present China’s development achievements in a wide range of fields to the broader world, Soong founded an English magazine named China Reconstructs. Today the monthly publication is known as China Today. I was invited to work there when China Reconstructs was just getting on its feet.

The magazine was warmly received by foreign readers and became the only Chinese publication allowed to be sold in the United States. China’s central government leaders displayed enthusiasm for the magazine’s guiding mission. I remember Premier Zhou Enlai once told the editing staff: “This magazine was founded by Soong Ching Ling, so your writing style should be like hers. It should avoid empty lecturing and explain viewpoints using factual evidence. Your target readers are foreign citizens, and to make your stories more persuasive, your writing style must adapt to their reading requirements.”

In the early days, Soong often wrote for China Reconstructs. Her articles were perfect examples of how to construct political discussions that were fully intelligible to, and engaged with, the lay reader. She wrote beautifully.

To carry forward Soong Ching Ling’s legacy, the China Welfare Institute and the Shanghai Soong Ching Ling Foundation have jointly set the goal of promoting international people-to-people exchanges as one of their top priorities. For example, CWI’s Little Companion Art Troupe regularly put on performances abroad, which have deepened people’s understanding of China and enhanced international friendship. Its young actors are called “little ambassadors.” Moreover, every three years we hold the Shanghai International Children’s Cultural and Art Festival to give children from all over the world the chance to meet and get to know each other. We also carry out regular international exchanges on women and children issues and hold seminars, the number and frequency of which are set to grow in the future.

Although Soong Ching Ling left us three decades ago, her spirit endures. Part of our mission is also to ensure greater recognition of her achievements and to promote her spirit around the world. This task is also the guiding mission of China Today.

Currently, many countries have established their own Soong Ching Ling foundations with local financial backing. This demonstrates the widespread appeal of her charitable cause. As we look toward the future, we hope that more people, regardless of nationality, race or faith, will champion the rights of women and children, and embrace all the other causes to which this exemplary individual devoted herself.

      1   2  

Services