Kathleen Anne Baird HallKathleen Anne Baird Hall (Chinese name: He Mingqing - 何明清) (4 October 1896 – 3 April 1970) was a New Zealand nurse and Anglican missionary who served in China. She was born in Napier, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand on 4 October 1896.[1] She trained at Auckland public hospital. In 1922 she was accepted by the Anglican society for the Propagation of the Gospel for missionary work in China. Mission in ChinaIn 1923, she arrived in Beijing (at that time called 'Beiping'). For several years she worked at the Peking Union Medical College, which was a well-funded hospital operated by protestant missionaries. She went through several years of language training and eventually was put in charge of a hospital in Datong. In 1927, she was transferred to a hospital in Anguo, where she was placed in the hospital management. Anguo was the first western hospital in a rural part of northern China. She ran two classes for training nurses in Anguo and trained more than 60 nurses. She went to rural areas to set up clinics and help the local people. She set up western medical stations in many places that had never seen such things before. In 1934, she returned to New Zealand briefly to do some studies before returning again to China. In 1934, she went to Shijiazhuang to help poor Chinese living in terrible conditions with western medicine.[2] She used her own money and even wrote back to New Zealand to ask her family to send her money. Role in World War IIJapanese soldiers began the war in July 1937 following the Marco Polo Bridge Incident. The first major battle in the war was fought in the area around Beijing (see Battle of Beiping–Tianjin). During this period, Kathleen tended to the medical needs of wounded Chinese. She also met Chinese general Lü Zhengcao who himself was wounded and tended by Kathleen at her hospital in Anguo.< She treated many wounded Chinese soldiers at her hospital in Anguo. She came to know of the Japanese atrocities in the war, like the taking of all the food and supplies from villages, then burning them down. During this time, according to local Chinese sources, she actively assisted the Chinese resistance against the Japanese invaders. She frequently used her identity as a missionary as a cover to purchase medical supplies that were used by Chinese that were resisting the Japanese invasion. She would purchase supplies in Beijing and then transfer them to rural areas in Hebei or Shanxi. She assisted Canadian doctor Norman Bethune, who was helping the Chinese communists in the Eighth Route Army, in this capacity, and formed a deep friendship with Dr. Bethune. Beijing was occupied by the Japanese at the start of the war, but it also had more ample medical resources within the city than rural areas on the outside. Every time that she would travel to Beijing, she would take a list given to her by Dr. Bethune of various medical items that the communist soldiers needed. She would purchase these items in Beijing nominally in the name of the missionary hospital in Anguo. She would make this trip more than 30 times in a year. A small network of Chinese resistors assisted her with this. A number of the people she trained at the missionary hospital in Anguo also went to join Dr. Bethune's medical team with the Eighth Army. She would sometimes sleep in churches and hide Chinese civilians or communist soldiers in the churches. A story from an eyewitness named Gao Jingyun, recorded in 1989, even claimed that she used the Xuanwumen church to meet people heading to Chinese communist territory and helped transport bomb material for them.
Another eyewitness named She Rong said
Friendship with Norman BethuneThe war had begun in July 1937. Norman Bethune, a Canadian communist medical doctor, who had earlier volunteered with the Republican forces in the Spanish civil war, arrived in China in January 1938 to assist the Chinese communists. He did not speak Chinese and so he relied entirely upon interpreters to help him. It was in late 1938, that he first heard of Kathleen Hall and her work, and he wanted to meet with her. He invited her to visit the Eighth army, and after she came and saw the problems they had with a lack of supplies or personnel, she began to work with them to set up the underground supply route of medical supplies and people from Beijing to the Eighth army. One time she asked Dr. Bethune to come to Anguo to perform emergency surgery, and he took a bicycle and personally went there to do the surgery, for which she was very grateful. She told Dr. Bethune that at the start of the war the Anglican church had told them that they could not join either side, or else they would be excommunicated. Dr. Bethune, an atheist, told her about his experiences in Spain and tried to convince her. In Spain, the nationalists under Franco had been openly supported by the preaching of high ranking authorities in the Catholic church, despite their mass murders of civilians and rebellion against a lawful government. Kathleen decided to support the communists. The two of them were very close friends. Kathleen raised some goats and they would drink goat milk with each other, or coffee, and shared many similar ideas. When Bethune died, he left the last of his money to Kathleen Hall. Buying medicine in the war"In the past several months, the main medical supplies have largely been reliant upon Ms. Hall's help, she has spent about 15000 Yuan on medicine. These medicines should be enough for the Eighth army to go through the winter" - Norman Bethune . Guo Qinglan, a nurse who worked in a hospital behind enemy lines wrote of her, "I think, only Kathleen Hall could have gotten me to the base...I was sitting with the patients in the first convoy, Kathleen Hall was wearing sunglasses, dressed up fully as a missionary, carefully and timely looking out for the things on the vehicle as well as our surroundings...the wooden and bamboo boxes were filled with medicines, underneath there was electric equipment and wireless radio, only on top it was covered with some tins of cookies" . She would usually dress in clothes that made her deliberately look like a foreigner and missionary, in order to avoid Japanese suspicion of her activities. She set up a string of underground stations for moving medical supplies to the Eighth army. She would move supplies from Beijing to Anguo, under the guise of using them at her hospital in Anguo and then move some of the supplies from Anguo to the resistance. Turn to CommunismThe Anglican church was profoundly opposed to international communism and it had given her as well as other missionaries at the start of the war that they could not choose sides, or else they would be excommunicated. When she had first come to China, she had little knowledge of the communists and she had once claimed that Communists were trouble-makers. But over time, her views changed. She met communist commander Nie Rongzhen and afterwards she claimed, "Communists have a mind that is open like the sea, only the communists will be able to change the face of China, because they have strict discipline, and they give a positive and friendly hope to the people of raising their standard of living" . Deportation from ChinaAfter the war had gone on for two years, and after less than a year since she first started helping Dr. Bethune, her activities raised the suspicions of the Japanese. The Japanese employed many collaborators among the Chinese and other occupied peoples, and they became aware of the true nature of what she was doing in China. They came and destroyed both her clinics as well as church. They issued a formal complaint to the British ambassador. Kathleen made a request to the Anglican communion to help her rebuild the church and clinics. Not realizing that she was the direct target of what the Japanese had done to her clinics, since the newspapers had not reported anything about it, she went to Beijing once more to buy medical supplies and once she was in the city, she was arrested by the Japanese. Japan was still at peace with the British empire at the time, so they opted to deport her rather than execute her. She was deported to Hong Kong. While in Hong Kong, she made the decision to resign from the Anglican missionaries and to join the Chinese Defense league, in order to prepare for a return to China. In October 1939, she and several others started a journey to go back to rejoin the communists in Shanxi, first travelling through Vietnam. When she reached Guiyang she heard of Dr. Bethune's death. She was greatly affected by this and mourned deeply. When she finally reached Shijiazhuang, her health deteriorated. The communists moved her to Xi'an and eventually she was sent back to New Zealand. Return to ChinaShe attempted to return to China in 1950, after the communist victory, but she was not allowed to enter the country at that time, due to a general ban on westerners and foreigners entering at the time of the Korean war. In 1960, she was allowed entry and made a friendship visit to Tian'anmen square in Beijing, where she met with Zhou Enlai and saw a statue of Norman Bethune, which she cried in front of. She took a handful of dirt from next to the statue in her hand- the dirt had been a mixture of dirt from China and dirt from Canada. LegacyShe died in 1970. According to her wishes, her remains were returned to China. On his deathbed, Norman Bethune wrote of her: 'Please convey my sincere thanks to Kathleen Hall, for all of her help'. A book on her in Chinese was written by Ma Baoru, the former deputy director of tourism in Baoding city. She is remembered in China as a hero and there are some statues of her. She was commemorated by the Tian Guang newspaper of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Beijing in 2017. She has a primary school named after her in Songjiazhuang. She has often been cited in the context of a friendship figure between New Zealand and China. A book in English on her life was written by Tom Newnham entitled 'Dr. Bethune's Angel: The Life of Kathleen Hall'. References
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