Isabel Crook, Who Lived in China for a Century, Passes Away at 107

Isabel Crook, Who Lived in China for a Century, Passes Away at 107


Isabel Crook, a China-born daughter of Canadian ⁤missionaries who became one of her adopted⁣ country’s most ​celebrated ⁢foreign residents, beloved as an educator, anthropologist and articulate advocate‍ for the Communist state, died on Sunday in Beijing. She was 107.

Her ​son Carl Crook said the⁢ cause of death, in a hospital, was pneumonia.

Mrs. Crook was among the last‍ of a generation of Westerners born to missionaries in China in the‍ decades before the Japanese invasion,⁤ World War⁣ II and the subsequent Communist⁤ revolution.

The experience defined them. Some, like Henry Luce, the publisher of Time and Life, became ardent anti-Communists. But others, including Mrs. Crook, ⁣perceived the Communists as saviors who were⁤ lifting up ‌the country from colonial squalor. (Still others, like the American diplomat John Paton Davies, made famous as a target of McCarthy-era attacks, fell somewhere in between.)

As an anthropologist, Mrs. Crook saw herself as an observer of ​social change; as a Communist, ⁤she saw herself ⁢as an ⁣agent of ​it.

After returning to​ China from college⁣ in ‌Toronto in 1939, she conducted field work among the impoverished, isolated villages of western Sichuan Province, traveling through ravines and mountain passes by foot, ⁤mule-cart and even zip line.

She met her future​ husband, David Crook, in China. A dedicated British Communist, he had fought against the fascists during the Spanish Civil​ War while also⁣ working as a spy for⁢ the Soviet NKVD, ⁣a precursor‍ to the KGB. When the fighting ended, the NKVD sent him ⁣to perform similar work ⁢in China.

After World War II‌ began, the couple​ moved to Britain, where David⁣ joined ⁣the Royal ‌Air Force. Isabel⁤ worked in‌ a munitions factory and joined the Communist Party. ⁤They married in 1942.

The Crooks returned ​to⁣ China in 1947 to teach English in the villages and towns controlled by the Chinese Communist Party during ⁢the country’s civil war. They were among the few Westerners‍ to‍ accompany the columns ‌of Communists during their victorious entry into Beijing in 1949, marking the founding of the ​new state.

The Crooks became true believers in Chinese communism. They were on the founding faculty of what became the Beijing Foreign Studies University, where they helped train ‍several generations ⁢of Chinese diplomats.

They wrote two books ⁣together ​based on their years spent⁤ among Chinese villagers:⁤ “Revolution in a Chinese Village: ‍Ten Mile Inn” (1959) and “The First Years of Yangyi Commune” (1966).

Both books​ have become classics in the field of Chinese ethnography, ⁣thanks to ⁢their analysis of how world-historical ‌changes like ⁢the Communist revolution affected everyday rural life.

Unlike other Westerners, the Crooks chose ‌to live on campus, alongside their students and fellow faculty members. They⁣ wore simple sackcloth outfits, like their neighbors. No one called Mrs. Crook “professor”; she ⁢was always “Comrade Isabel.”

Their faith remained unshaken even after ‌David was‌ charged with⁣ espionage and imprisoned…

2023-08-25 ‍16:17:05
Source from www.nytimes.com

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