Helen Foster Snow

Helen Foster Snow (September 21, 1907 – January 11, 1997) was an American journalist who reported from China in the 1930s under the name Nym Wales on the developing Chinese Civil War, the Korean independence movement and the Second Sino-Japanese War.

Helen Foster Snow
Born
Helen Foster

(1907-09-21)September 21, 1907
DiedJanuary 11, 1997(1997-01-11) (aged 89)
Resting placeNorth Madison West Side Cemetery
NationalityAmerican
Other namesNym Wales
EducationUniversity of Utah
Occupation
  • Journalist
  • Author
Known forJournalism
Co-founder of Chinese Industrial Cooperatives
Spouse(s)Edgar Snow (1932–1949)

Snow's family moved often throughout her youth and she ended up living in Salt Lake City with her grandmother in her teenage years, until she decided to move to China in 1931. There, she married American journalist Edgar Snow and became a correspondent for several publications. While she and her husband were sympathetic to the revolutionaries in China, whom she compared favorably to the Nationalists under Chiang Kai-shek, she was never a member of the Chinese or American Communist Party.

While living in Beijing, the Snows befriended leftist leaders of the 1935 December 9th Movement, who arranged for first Edgar, then Helen to visit the communist wartime capital, Yan'an, in 1937, where she interviewed Chinese Communist leaders, including Mao Zedong. The Snows also conceptualized the Chinese Industrial Cooperatives, known as the Gung-Ho movement, which provided jobs and stability. In 1940, Snow returned to the United States, where she and Edgar divorced. She continued to support the Cooperatives and write books based on her experiences in China. In the late 1940s, critics grouped her with the China Hands as one of those responsible for the "loss of China" who went beyond sympathy to active support of Mao's revolution.

Early life

Helen Foster was born in Cedar City, Utah, and raised as a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). She was born to John Moody Foster and Hannah Davis, who met working as teachers at Ricks Academy, a school affiliated with the LDS Church.[1]:102[2]:15 Hannah graduated from Ricks Academy, and John was a graduate from Stanford University. Both of Helen's parents were descendants of Mormon pioneers who migrated to Utah in the mid-1800s.[3]

From the time Helen was young, the Foster family moved quite frequently. After Helen's birth in Cedar City, the Fosters moved to Chicago so John could attend law school. Several years later, the family once again moved to Idaho. The frequent moves helped to shape Helen's outgoing personality as she was constantly concerned about what her new peers would think of her.[2]:18 Being the oldest child and only daughter of the family, she took on a lot of responsibility as the family expanded. She often worked alongside her mother to care for her three younger brothers and complete chores, especially when financial circumstances were difficult for the Fosters.[2]:16

Upon entering high school, Helen moved to Salt Lake City to live with her grandmother and aunt.[2]:19 She attended West High School and became involved in many school activities and organizations. She frequently worked on editing the school's yearbook and was elected student vice president of her senior class. Due to her father's influence, Helen planned on attending college at Stanford. But the cost of tuition was too much for her parents to consider. According to Helen, her parents believed that "girls were not considered a good investment in higher education as they would only get married, while boys were worth it".[2]:20 However, Helen's father agreed to pay for her attendance at the University of Utah. She attended school for several years, but did not graduate.[2]

Instead, Helen focused on work and was hired as a secretary for the Utah chapter of the American Silver Mining Commission.[2]:23 While at this position, she decided she would like to work abroad in addition to her aspiration to write her own "great American novel".[4] Helen took the civil service exam and passed, yet there were no open positions in Europe, where she initially desired to go. However, her employer had a connection in China, ultimately securing a job for Helen with the president of an American company in Shanghai.[5]:9 In August 1931, Helen set sail to Asia in the hopes of becoming a writer.[6]

Life in China

Arrival

Almost immediately after arriving in 1931, she met Edgar Snow, who had arrived in China in 1929. Ed was ready to return to America at this point as his mother had died and he was battling malaria.[6]:29–30 But meeting Helen convinced him to stay working in China. She was a big fan of his work, having collected all of his newspaper clippings. Upon their first meeting, Helen gave Edgar the folder of newspaper clippings, impressing him greatly.[4] Helen wanted her career to emulate his.[6]

Less than one week after Helen's arrival, the Yangtze flood caused extreme damage around Shanghai.[3] Helen was working as a foreign correspondent for the Seattle Star through the Scripps-Canfield League, a newspaper publishing company, and was to provide images "glorifying the glamorous Orient".[6]:39 The flood of the Yangtze was the worst in recorded history, displacing 120,000 people. Over a period of three weeks, continuous floods killed over 600,000 and destroyed 12 million homes.[6]:39

Several months later, on January 28, 1932, Japanese forces invaded Shanghai.[3] Helen was in the battle area and used to watch the action from the tower at her apartment.[6]:50 Edgar was in the midst of the battle. However, because of his foreigner status, he was able to observe the action up close with a lesser amount of risk. Helen too wanted to experience battle in person and take better pictures of the war. Ed helped her to get a press card, and Helen was on her way to becoming a war correspondent herself.[6]:51

Helen had only planned to stay in China for a year. However, over the next year, a courtship blossomed between Helen and Edgar. Their adventurous lifestyles in China served as the backdrop for their affair. In a letter from the winter of 1932, Helen wrote, "I like him better than anyone else I have ever known".[6]:54 Edgar proposed to Helen on her 25th birthday, but she declined his offer. She didn't want their marriage to suffer because of her "author psychology" as she was working on a book.[3] Several months later, Ed proposed once again and Helen accepted. The couple married on Christmas Day in 1932.[6]:72 The Snows would remain in China for nearly a decade.[2]

December 9 Student Movement

At a time when many Chinese were impatient with the Nationalist government for not opposing Japanese more actively, the couple moved to Beiping, as Beijing was then called, and took up residence in a small house near Yenching University, where Edgar taught journalism. Helen enrolled in courses at the university. The couple benefited from extraterritorial status as foreigners in China, so they were exempt from Chinese law.[7] With this privilege, the Snows were able to assist students in protesting Fascism and contribute to the student movement. Helen once observed, "We couldn't have done anything if we'd been under Chinese law. A Chinese would have been executed for even messing with such things as we did".[1]:62 The Snows served as a source of information for the students, providing them with information that was generally censored by the government.[8]:73 While the Snows never joined the Communist party, they sympathized with Chinese students who desired to resist the Japanese.[8]

In 1935, Helen played a large role in orchestrating the anti-Japanese December 9th Movement at Yenching after the attack on Manchuria. Between 800 and 3000 students are estimated to have marched in the streets on the night of December 9.[2]:62 Helen not only directed the demonstration, but she also reported on it. This particular protest inspired the organization of 65 other demonstrations in 32 cities across China.[8]:76 One week later, on December 16, an even larger demonstration took place. Nearly 10,000 students from 28 schools participated in this protest.[2]:62 The Snows got to know idealistic and patriotic students, a number of whom were in their journalism classes, and some of whom were members of the Communist underground and would eventually become leaders of the Chinese Communist Party.[7] Edgar and Helen opened their home to student activists during this time as a safe place to develop plans of the student movement and Communist Party.[2]:58

The couple helped translate Living China, a collection of stories that served as a modern left-wing literary work.[5]:10 Helen also produced and dispersed anti-fascist documents to students. In addition, the Snows produced a magazine in 1937 called Democracy, which was intended to spread Christian ethics.[5]:12 Edgar was intended to be the driving force behind the magazine, however, Helen took charge as her husband worked on his book. The Snows had an agreement that Helen would do all the work for the publication and Edgar would put his name on it as editor.[7] However, the magazine's production came to an end when the Japanese invaded and seized copies from the presses that same year.[7]

Caves of Yan'an and Mao Zedong

Edgar was the first to go to the "Red Areas" and came back with the material for his Red Star Over China. Helen, or "Peg", as she was known to her friends, was not to be outdone, and soon followed. In April 1937, Helen made a trip to the city of Yan'an, the location of the Chinese Communist Party's headquarters.[6] Her trip was much longer than anticipated as the Japanese occupied Northern China beginning in July of that same year and bad weather conditions made it impossible to travel.[6] In Yan'an, Helen was only the second foreign woman to enter the area, and the eighth foreign journalist to have such access.[7] She interviewed Mao Zedong and also got his support for what would become the Chinese Industrial Cooperatives.[7]

According to Yu Jianting, Helen's translator, Mao explained the history of the Red Army for the first time to Helen despite Edgar's multiple interviews with him the previous year.[3] Chinese Communist leaders had not shared the history of the party previously as they wanted to be seen as equals within the community rather than "heroes of the people".[7] Mao provided Helen with a letter introducing her as a war correspondent, which would give her access to otherwise restricted areas.[7] Mao also requested that Helen share the Chinese Communist Party's "Ten Guiding Principles to Resist against Japan and Save the Nation" on an international scale.[5]:14 Helen's work with Mao gave her the opportunity to interview other important Communist Party figures in Yan'an, which would become the basis for her book.[9]

Helen also interviewed Kang Keqing, wife of the future head of state Zhu De. Kang informed Helen of several issues the army were facing, including lack of soldiers and weaponry. Helen maintained a friendship with Kang and the two exchanged letters for many years after Helen left China.[10]

While in Yan'an, Helen suffered from severe dysentery and became extremely ill.[3] Despite her illness, Helen completed her book's manuscript in less than one year. Inside Red China was the first book ever written that focused on the city of Yan'an and became important literature to students all over China.[6]:232 This book was supposed to be a companion work to Edgar's Red Star Over China, but it never received the acclaim that Edgar's work had. This specific trip to Yan'an provided Helen with the material to produce at least five other books.[5]:14 Helen used experiences from this trip to write her most successful book, The Song of Ariran.[2] She also drew upon her interviews with Kim San, Korean independence leader she met in Yan'an.[4]

Chinese Industrial Cooperatives and the Gung-Ho movement

In 1937, Japan attacked China, destroying or gaining control over 90% of the country's modern industries.[5]:15 The couple joined anti-Japanese friends, such as Ida Pruitt, Israel Epstein, and Rewi Alley in organizing Chinese Industrial Cooperatives' Gung-Ho industrial worker's cooperatives after 1937. Helen envisioned the concept for Indusco from the beginning.[11] The purpose for the industrial cooperatives was to create jobs and income so the Chinese people could wield economic power against Japan.[12]:1, 5 The system was to be run by its own members. "Gung-ho" is Chinese for "work together", which represents all peoples working together in cooperation.[2]:138 The Nationalist Chinese Government under Chiang Kai-shek was willing to provide funding for the cooperatives and that support would continue under Mao Zedong.[12]:5–6

In 1938, the first booklet titled Chinese Industrial Cooperatives was published.[6]:303 The first Committee for the Promotion of Industrial Cooperatives in China was formed on April 3, 1938.[6]:305 Helen used her writing position with certain publications to create support and financial backing in America for the Chinese Cooperatives. In addition, the Snows became good friends with Colonel Evans Carlson, who had a connection to President Franklin D. Roosevelt.[5]:37 Helen believed Roosevelt would support the cooperatives in accordance with his New Deal policy. Eventually, Eleanor Roosevelt became a member of the American Board of Sponsors for the Cooperatives.[5]:37, 39 Overall, the Cooperatives received funds from Americans as well as Chinese citizens in the Philippines.[5]

After the Chinese Industrial Cooperatives' first year in existence, 1,284 industrial cooperatives were functioning with 15,625 members.[6]:306 By 1940, the numbers in membership nearly doubled.[8]:57 With notoriety building around the cooperatives, Helen took it upon herself to publish a book on Indusco for an American audience. In 1941, she wrote and published China Builds for Democracy.[5]:38 The book not only created publicity, but also accumulated support for the Cooperatives in the United States.[5]:37

By June 1941, the Indusco system had reached its highest numbers, with 1,867 cooperatives with 29,284 registered members.[12]:11 However, by the end of World War II, the Indusco model was not as powerful as it once was in China. In December 1945, only 335 Indusco cooperatives with 4,889 registered members were reported.[12]:11 While Indusco declined in China, the model spread to other nations, including India, Burma, and Japan. Helen continued to promote the Indusco model as she remained a member and vice chairman of the American Committee to Aid Chinese Industrial Cooperatives until 1951 when it split.[5]:39 She revived the committee in 1981. In 1982, it was proposed that the Chinese Industrial Cooperatives be revived again, and the Peking government granted permission for such a revival in 1983.[6]:330

Post-China years

The Snows' marriage was strained and the Japanese occupation of much of China made life difficult. In December 1940, the Snows decided to move back to the United States in fear that the Japanese would make them prisoners of war. The attack on Pearl Harbor would take place exactly one year later. Prior to their departure, Ed was offered a position as a war correspondent for the New York Herald Tribune and Helen encouraged him to take it.[6]:323 She returned to the United States without him. But not much time had passed until Ed realized he didn't want to be without his wife and the living conditions were too difficult for him to withstand much longer. The Snows had been in China for a decade and they were both lacking proper nutrition and vitamins. Nearly the entire time they were in Asia, they did not eat raw foods in order to avoid dysentery and their health was depleted.[6]:323 Upon their initial return to the United States, the couple lived in California for a short time and then moved into a small mid-1700s house in Madison, Connecticut.[2][6]

While the Snows were settled back in America, Ed would continue to travel back and forth between home and Europe. His books and reporting on China had earned him critical acclaim in the U.S. This success made Ed a very valuable asset as a war correspondent. President Roosevelt often looked to Ed for his understanding on matters in Asia.[2]:151 Roosevelt personally suggested Ed become a war correspondent once again, to which Ed agreed. Though he did not want to report on World War II directly after his time in China, his personal struggles with Helen and encouragement from Roosevelt pushed Ed to travel and cover the war. In 1945, the couple legally separated. Ed started a new relationship with actress Lois Wheeler and sought a divorce from Helen. The divorce proceedings took several years as the two were stalemated in terms of settlement. The couple formally divorced in 1949. Ed married Lois less than ten days after the official date of the divorce. He lived in exile in Switzerland until he died from cancer in 1972.[1]

Helen spent the rest of her life in Connecticut, developing an interest in family genealogy, drafting a novel, and writing short pieces on her experiences in China. Although Helen was never tried during the McCarthy era, her works suffered from the idea that she was a Chinese Communist sympathizer. She often had issues getting new books published and many of her books went out of print.[13] Helen returned to China twice more in her lifetime. The first visit was from 1972 to 1973, following President Richard Nixon's trip in 1972 which eased relations between China and the United States. The second visit was in 1978 when Helen returned to China for six weeks with a camera crew. There she was interviewed and asked to recount her adventures of the 1930s with Edgar. She published her autobiography in 1984.[11]

Death and legacy

On January 11, 1997, Helen Foster Snow died at the age of 89 at the Fowler Nursing Center in Guilford, Connecticut. Memorial services were held in Connecticut and China.[11] An official Chinese memorial service took place in the Great Hall of the People on Tiananmen Square in Beijing, an honor rarely bestowed upon foreigners.[7]

Prior to her death, she donated personal papers, book manuscripts, and photographs taken of Chinese notables in the 1930s to the Hoover Institution Library and Archives, which holds 63 manuscript boxes of her papers.[14] After her death, in 1997, Helen's family donated remaining manuscripts, documents, and photographs to the Brigham Young University library.[15] On October 26–27, 2000, BYU held a Helen Foster Snow Symposium to celebrate this donation and gather scholars. At this symposium, the documentary Helen Foster Snow: Witness to Revolution premiered.[16]

Part of a hospital and a school in Xi'an, China, were named after her.[7] There is also a Helen Foster Snow wing in the Communist Eighth Route Army Museum in Xi'an and a Helen Foster Snow Society in Beijing.[16] In 2009, the US–China Cultural Exchange Committee placed a 7-foot (2.1 m) tall bronze statue of Helen Foster Snow, cast in China, in the Main Street Park of her hometown of Cedar City.[17] In 2011, students and faculty from Southern Utah University began a collaborative project with Chinese musicians, dancers, and artists to create a dance drama based on Helen Foster Snow's life.[18]

Awards and honors

In 1981, Helen Foster Snow was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for her work in China and nominated again in 1982.[9] In her memoir My China Years, Helen writes, "The nomination was not for any particular achievement, but for the potential that my ideas and world view hold for peace and progress in the world".[6]:329 In 1993, Helen was the first recipient of the China Writers Association's literary award.[19] In June 1996, Helen was honored by the Chinese government as Friendship Ambassador, one of China's highest honors offered to foreign citizens.[11] She was the first American and only the fifth person ever to receive the award.[9]

Works

Helen Foster Snow wrote under the pen name Nym Wales, which her husband chose for her. "Nym'' is the Greek word for name. Wales was used because she was part Welsh.[9] However, the pseudonym created questions regarding nationality and whether the author was an "insider" of the Communist Party.[2]:133 Helen's works amount to 40 books and 27 manuscripts.[8]:19[9]

  • Helen Foster Snow, Inside Red China (New York,: Doubleday, Doran, 1939). Reprinted: New York: DaCapo 1977, 1979.
  • Nym Wales, China Builds for Democracy; a Story of Cooperative Industry (New York,: Modern Age Books, 1941). Reprinted: St. Clair Shores, MI: *Scholarly Press, 1972.
  • Nym Wales and Kim San, Song of Ariran: A Korean Communist in the Chinese Revolution (New York: The John Day Company, 1941). Reprinted: San Francisco: Ramparts Press, 1972.
  • Nym Wales, The Chinese Labor Movement (New York: John Day, 1945). Reprinted: Freeport, NY: Books for Libraries, 1970.
  • Nym Wales, Red Dust; Autobiographies of Chinese Communists (Stanford, Calif.,: Stanford University Press, 1952).
  • Nym Wales, Fables and Parables for the Mid-Century (New York,: Philosophical Library, 1952).
  • Nym Wales, Notes on the Left-Wing Painters and Modern Art in China (Madison, Conn., 1961).
  • Nym Wales, Women in Modern China (The Hague, Paris,: Mouton, 1967).
  • Helen Foster Snow, My China Years: A Memoir (New York: Morrow, 1984).

Further reading

  • Kelly Ann Long, Helen Foster Snow: An American Woman in Revolutionary China (Boulder: University Press of Colorado, 2006). ISBN 0-87081-847-3.
  • S. Bernard Thomas, Season of High Adventure: Edgar Snow in China (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996).[1]
  • "Helen Foster Snow: Witness to Revolution" (2000) 56:46 minute documentary produced by Combat Films and Research.

References

  1. Thomas, S. Bernard (1996). Season of High Adventure: Edgar Snow in China. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  2. Long, Kelly Ann (2006). Helen Foster Snow: An American Woman in Revolutionary China. Boulder, Colorado: University of Colorado.
  3. Dodge Billingsley (Producer and Director) (2000). Helen Foster Snow: Witness to Revolution (Documentary). Filmakers Library.
  4. Finding aid authors: Harvard Heath, Lisa Lyons Van Tassell, and Taylor M. Dix (2014). "Helen Foster Snow Papers: Biographical History". Prepared for the L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Provo, UT. Retrieved November 18, 2016.
  5. Lyons, Lisa Ann (2000). Helen Foster Snow: Witness to Revolution. Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University.
  6. Snow, Helen Foster (1987). My China Years. New York, New York: William Morrow & Company.
  7. XML file authors: Harvard Heath, Lisa Lyons Van Tassell, and Taylor M. Dix (2004). "Register of the Helen Foster Snow (1907–1997) Collection: Biographical History". Prepared for the L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Provo, UT. Retrieved September 19, 2016.
  8. Cao, (Katy) Xinquan (2002). Helen Foster Snow: A Journalist in the Chinese Revolution in the 1930s. Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University.
  9. Mahony, Edmund (January 14, 1997). "Helen Foster Snow Dies". Hartford Courant.
  10. Ye 叶, Meijuan 梅娟 (2015). "Kang Keqing yu Hailun・Sinuo de youyi 康克清与海伦・斯诺的友谊 [The friendship between Kang Keqing and Helen Snow]". Bolan Qunshu 博览群书 (1): 113–116.
  11. Saxon, Wolfgang (January 14, 1997). "Helen Foster Snow, 89, a Founder Of Industrial Co-ops in China". The New York Times.
  12. Hansen, Gary B. (2000). "The contribution of Helen Foster Snow and INDUSCO to job and enterprise creation, income generation and economic democracy". Helen Foster Snow Symposium, Brigham Young University.
  13. Crittenden, Ann (February 6, 1979). "Helen Snow and China: A Renewed Relationship". The New York Times.
  14. "Register of the Nym Wales papers". Retrieved August 6, 2016.
  15. "Helen Foster Snow Collection". Archived from the original on January 6, 2016. Retrieved August 6, 2016.
  16. Simons, J. Lee. "Helen Foster Snow: Enigmatic Heroine". David M. Kennedy Center for International Studies.
  17. Choate-Nielsen, Amy (November 10, 2009). "Amy Choate-Nielsen: Statue to honor Cedar City native". Retrieved August 6, 2016.
  18. Webber, Sarah. "Dance production honors Cedar City native's legacy". SUU News. Cedar City, Utah. Archived from the original on August 9, 2011.
  19. King, Gail (2010). "The Helen Foster Snow Collection in the Brigham Young University Harold B. Lee Library L. Tom Perry Special Collections". Journal of East Asian Libraries (150).

Archival materials

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