An Unfaded Legacy

2020-01-07 06:27ByZhaoWei
Beijing Review 2020年1期

By Zhao Wei

When Wen Ting walked into the International House in New York City for the fi rst time in 2018, she felt a spiritual connection with her great grandfather Wen Yiduo, who used to live on the ninth fl oor of the building 95 years ago.

Wen Yiduo (1899-1946), one of the prominent poets in early 20th century China, was among the students chosen by the government in 1922 to pursue fi ne arts and literature in the U.S. He went to Chicago fi rst but his last stop in the U.S. was the Art Students League in New York, a private art school.

While studying there, he lived in the International House, a community of students and scholars from different countries, and with his friends, created history by holding the first Peking Opera performance there. The performers were Chinese students, and Wen was responsible for the stage design and art. It was 1924, and the Rockefeller family came to watch the performance.

A dream come true

Ninety-fi ve years later, his great granddaughter Wen Ting followed in his U.S. footsteps. As an assistant professor teaching Chinese to international students at Beijing Language and Culture University, she was chosen for an exchange program. Offered an assignment to teach Chinese at Columbia University for two years, she said yes with alacrity, fi nding it a dream opportunity, both for her research on Chinese teaching, and also to fulfi ll a family dream, tracing the history of her great grandfathers sojourn in the U.S.

“I had heard so many stories about Wen Yiduo! Since I had a chance to work in the city where he used to live, I wanted to fi nd out the untold story myself,” she said.

In a serendipitous discovery, when Wen Ting started teaching at Columbia University, she found it was a walking distance from the International House.

“I was so excited the first time I walked there. I thought my great grandfather must have taken the same route when he was here,” she said.

Wen Ting never met him, nor did her father. Wen Yiduo was assassinated in 1946 when he was only 46. At that time, Wen Tings grandfather was less than 18 years old.

“My father Wen Liming is a researcher on history. Wen Yiduo is one of his most important subjects, not only as a family member but also as a figure of modern Chinese history,” Wen Ting said. “We planned that my father would come to the U.S. during my stay so that we would together trace Wen Yiduos life while living and studying in the U.S.”

It took Wen Yiduo a 17-day journey by sea to arrive in Seattle from Shanghai on August 1, 1922. He wrote some poems during those 17 days, one of them inspired by a shining star he saw from his ship.

It took another seven days to reach Chicago by train, where he attended the Art Institute of Chicago.

“From his letters to his family and friends that we collected, we found that he changed his address fi ve times in Chicago as it cost less to live farther and farther from the college,”Wen Liming said while giving a talk about Wen Yiduo at the Renwen Society at the China Institute based in New York City, a non-profit organization working to create cross-cultural understanding.

Wen Ting and Wen Liming started retracing their illustrious ancestors footsteps in the U.S. in June 2019. Chicago was their fi rst stop. With the addresses on the old letters, they went to all the fi ve places.

One of them was Snell-Hitchcock, a residential hall at the University of Chicago built in 1893 that is on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places. They even found the room Wen Yiduo used to live in, though the room number had changed.

“The student currently living in the room let us come in and take photographs,” Wen Ting said.

After Chicago, the Wens traveled to Colorado Springs, a city in the state of Colorado at the foot of the Rocky Mountains, where Wen Yiduo had transferred to Colorado College in 1923. They found some rare documents in the college library, including the yearbook, the enrollment name list, and an issue of the college newspaper with a group photo of Wen Yiduo and other Chinese students.

“I found a lot of important documents and materials that we never expected to see, especially at the Art Institute of Chicago archives and Colorado College library,” Wen Ting said. “It means a lot to my family and my research.”

Coming full circle

Wen Yiduos deep love for Chinese culture as well as some experience of discrimination he faced in the U.S. made him a passionate promoter and defender of Chinese culture there.He participated in establishing the Dajiang Society in the U.S., a nationalist Chinese student organization.