Global EditionASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
    Lifestyle
    Home / Lifestyle / People

    A diamond hewn out of the snow

    A chance meeting in New Hampshire between E. Grey Dimond, a cardiologist, and his famous contemporary Edgar Snow led to a friendship that long outlasted the latter's life, and a quest by the former to get close to a country Snow had sought to understand and to explain.

    By ZHAO XU | China Daily | Updated: 2021-08-21 10:38
    Share
    Share - WeChat
    A Chinese watercolor-on-silk painting by artist Guo Yidan, depicting the meeting between Edgar Snow and the Dimond couple at Snow's home in Switzerland in 1971. [Photo/THE DIASTOLE SCHOLARS' CENTER]

    On Sept 15, 1971, E. Grey Dimond, 53, found himself crossing the border between Hong Kong and the Chinese mainland, from what he called "neon China" to New China, half a year before US president Richard Nixon stepped onto the ground at the airport in Beijing to begin what he called his "week that changed the world".

    The cardiologist, today remembered as the founder of the School of Medicine at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, had a special mission on that trip. He was to verify some reports filed by his fellow Kansas City native Edgar Snow, based on the man's own previous travel to China during which he was invited to ascend the rostrum in Tian'anmen Square at a time when the US and China were estranged.

    "This chance to review patients, their records, their medication …from this experience I realized that Edgar Snow has been right (in noticing the huge advances made in Chinese medicine)," wrote Dimond in his 1975 book More than Herbs and Acupuncture, countering the prevalent view in the West.

    "I enjoy the criticisms of contemporaries who are so buried in their hostility toward that they could not see the 'return' of China," Dimond said.

    One of the best-known victims of that hostility was Snow.

    Between June and October 1936, Snow, after having studied journalism at the University of Missouri and spent eight years in China, traversed hundreds of miles of inhospitable territory to reach the Chinese Red Army base in the country's northwest, where he listened, observed and reported the Communist revolutionaries' own stories in their own words. More than 100,000 copies of the resulting book, Red Star Over China, sold in England alone within its first few weeks of publication.

    [Photo provided to China Daily]

    It was instantly considered a classic and remained so, for "this book has stood the test of time on both these counts-as a historical record and as an indication of a trend", to quote the celebrated China scholar John K. Fairbank.

    That "trend" has since captured the fascination of the West. But it also led, during the era of McCarthyism, to Snow's exile in 1959 from the US to Switzerland, where he lived for the rest of his life.

    Yet Snow, who remained a US citizen throughout, did return on rare occasions, including in October 1965, when he was in Dublin, New Hampshire, for the Dublin Peace Conference. It was organized by Grenville Clark (1882-1967), an influential lawyer of his time and author of World Peace Through World Law, who was nominated four times for the Nobel Peace Prize.

    "The participants … were stimulating, but the man who brought real excitement to the gathering was the expatriate American author Edgar Snow," Dimond, who married Clark's daughter Mary Clark, and was at the conference, later wrote.

    "In Dublin, Edgar Snow and Dr. Dimond shared adjoining rooms with a bathroom-proof of a very special kind of friendship," said Nancy Hill, Dimond's personal assistant for the last decade of his life. The two men really hit it off, with Snow introducing Dimond to the term Third World and its vast potential implications.

    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next   >>|
    Most Popular
    Top
    BACK TO THE TOP
    English
    Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
    License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

    Registration Number: 130349
    FOLLOW US
     
    久久精品中文字幕大胸| 精品爆乳一区二区三区无码av| 亚洲国产a∨无码中文777| 麻豆国产原创中文AV网站| YW尤物AV无码国产在线观看| 久久久久精品国产亚洲AV无码 | 国产成年无码久久久免费| 最近中文字幕大全免费版在线| 国产拍拍拍无码视频免费| 亚洲中文字幕无码一区| 日本欧美亚洲中文| 亚洲中文久久精品无码| 中文无码vs无码人妻| 国产99久久九九精品无码| 精品三级AV无码一区| 亚洲AV无码国产丝袜在线观看| 人妻少妇无码精品视频区| 色综合天天综合中文网| 日本精品久久久中文字幕 | 最近2018中文字幕在线高清下载| 下载天堂国产AV成人无码精品网站| 日韩乱码人妻无码系列中文字幕| 亚洲精品无码久久久久久| 国产成人无码一二三区视频| 国产色综合久久无码有码| 日韩免费码中文在线观看| 最近中文字幕完整版免费高清 | 在线天堂中文WWW官网| 亚洲中文字幕无码一去台湾| 无码不卡亚洲成?人片| 天码av无码一区二区三区四区| 本免费AV无码专区一区| 99无码熟妇丰满人妻啪啪| 99久久无码一区人妻| 无码乱码观看精品久久| 亚洲欧美综合在线中文| 亚洲中文字幕在线乱码| 最近免费视频中文字幕大全| 日韩中文字幕在线不卡| 人妻无码精品久久亚瑟影视| 亚洲AV无码专区亚洲AV伊甸园|