Text extracted from opening pages of book: CHINA AFTER SEVEN YEARS
OF WAR By HAWTHORNE CHENG SAMUEL ML CHAD CHU FU-SUNG FRANK TAG'
CHARLES C H. WAN FLOYD TAYLOR - JEAN LYON Edited fry HOLLINGTON K.
TONG Vice-Minuter of Information New York THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
ILLUSTRATIONS PACING EVERYDAY SCENE IN A TYPICAL CHINESE TOWN . 22
REFUGEES RETURN HOME AFTER THE CHANGTEH BATTLE ( 1943) 23
CHUNGKING, WHERE THE RIVERS YANGTZE AND CHIALING MEET 54 PISHAN
MARKET-PLACE 55 WORKERS IN A COTTON SPINNING FACTORY . . . . 150
FARMER AND His WATER-BUFFALO 151 ADULT EDUCATION FOR THE WORKER 182
BRIEFING IN Two LANGUAGES 183 Jacket design and illustrations of
this book from Chinese Ministry of Information; photographs by
George Alexanderson. CONTENTS PAGE Foreword ............. vii THE
WAR AND THE PEOPLE, by Hawthorne Cheng . i CHUNGKING: CITY OF MUD
AND COURAGE, by Floyd Taylor ........... 31 PISHAN: PORTRAIT OF A
SMALL TOWN, by Chu Fu-szmg 56 NEW HORIZONS FOR THE CHINESE WOMAN,
by Jean Lyon ............ 65 MAN OF THE PLOW AND THE SWORD, by
Charles C. H. Wm .......... 78 STUDENT LIFE IN CHINA, by Frank Tao
..... 101 WARTIME CHINESE LITERATURE, by Chu Fw-sung . . 125
PROGRESS TOWARD CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT, by Chu Fiirsung
........... 148 CHINA'S LIFE LINE IN THE AIR, by Samuel M. Chao .
167 FLYING UNDER Two FLAGS, by Samuel M. Chao . . 184 AMERICAN
KNow-How FOR CHINESE SOLDIERS, by Samuel M. Chao ........... 204
CHINESE COURAGE IN THE BURMA JUNGLES, by Hawthorne Cheng ..........
213 THE WAR AND THE PEOPLE By Hawthorne Cheng THE Chinese believe
that all things under heaven work to gether for good. An evil comes
but will not long stay. No matter how a story begins, it has a
happy ending. During sevenyears of war, the Chinese have suffered
misery. There have been broken homes and broken hearts. There have
been separations and dislocations. There have been worries about
food and about clothes and about innu merable things. The war years
are not the first in which the Chinese have suffered. In their best
times, they were afflicted with poverty. The majority of them are
poor by birth. On top of poverty there have been floods, droughts,
civil wars, each bringing untold suffering. All these calamities
soon passed. The Chi nese rose after each, not only unbeaten but
stronger through the discipline of hardships which, down the
centuries, they have learned to endure and overcome. The present
war has brought the worst of the worst to the Chinese people. Seven
years is the longest that any evil has remained with them, but it
has not been long enough to wear out people who for thousands of
years have suffered hardships and privations, and have survived.
This long war will end as all other evils have ended, and there
will come a better day. Until it comes, the Chinese have the spirit
to smile in the face of hardships and to carry on a spirit which
has sustained them through the calamities of the seven years of
this war as it sustained them through calamities of the past. 2 THE
WAR AND THE PEOPLE It is the spirit of her teeming millions of
farmers, from whom most of the five million men of China's army
were drawn, and from whose fields comes the food for the army. It
is the spirit of her laborers, her mechanics and engineers who have
built China's wartime railways, highways, water ways, and other
arteries of communication, and who work in China's arsenals to keep
the guns supplied withammunition. It is the spirit of China's women
as well as her men. The people of China, despite the stress and
strain of war, have carried on. They continue to make love, to get
mar ried, to give birth to babies and to support growing families
on meager incomes. Seven years is a long time, during which many
things can happen and many things have happened to Teng Chan. Teng
saw the beginning of the war as a bachelor in Shang hai and
Nanking, met and fell in love with a girl, and was married, lived
through the worst of the bombing in Chung king and is now the
father of two child
General
Imprint: |
Read Books
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Release date: |
March 2007 |
First published: |
March 2007 |
Authors: |
Hollington K Tong
|
Dimensions: |
216 x 140 x 15mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback - Trade
|
Pages: |
268 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-4067-5832-0 |
Categories: |
Books >
Humanities >
History >
General
Books >
History >
General
|
LSN: |
1-4067-5832-9 |
Barcode: |
9781406758320 |
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