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Last edited by Duffbeerforme (talk | contribs) 4 days ago. (Update) |
Michael Shapiro | |
---|---|
Born | 1910 Ukraine |
Died | September 29, 1986 Beijing, China |
Nationality | British |
Occupation(s) | Journalist, Translator |
Michael Mendel Shapiro (1910 – September 29, 1986) was a Ukrainian-born British Journalist and outspoken communist. In the late 1930’s and during the 1940’s he was active in tenants’ rights activities and became a Stepney councilor. He joined the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) in 1934 and in 1950 was sent to China. He became one of the long-term residents in Beijing, was involved in training journalists in the Xinhua News Agency and worked with the teams that translated Chairman Mao’s work. Although he spent 5 years in Qincheng Prison during the Cultural Revolution he remained committed to the communist cause and after his release he spent the rest of his life in China.
Early life and education
editMichael’s father was Alexander Chaim Shapiro and his mother was Rivka Odel Shapiro (born Kairys). They were both born in the late 1800s in Poland or Ukraine. He had four siblings: one brother, Jack, and three sisters, Annie, Edith, and Beatrice (Beattie), all born in England. Chaim and Rivka fled the pogroms in eastern Europe/Russia in the early 1900s and settled in Stepney in the east end of London. Chaim taught in the temple and prepared boys for their bar mitzvah. Rivka was fluent in Hebrew, Yiddish. Russian and English. She taught local women how to use the recently introduced electric ovens and helped widows manage their finances.
Michael won a scholarship that enabled him to attend university. He studied at the University of London and received a B.Sc. in Economics in 1931 from the London School of Economics.[1] [2]He later lectured in economics at the London School of Economics. Michael and his younger brother Jack rejected all religious beliefs though their three sisters remained observant Jews all their lives. They joined the Young Communist League in 1931 and the Communist Party of Great Britain in 1934.[1]
Michael became an expert on housing questions and, under the name Michael Best, wrote about housing issues for the Daily Worker. In 1936, he became Secretary of the Stepney Tenants Defense League. Around 1939, he was instrumental in the formation of the National Federation of Residents’ and Tenants’ Associations and functioned as its General Secretary. He worked on projects with the Architects and Technicians Organization (ATO) where his wife was the secretary.[3] Shortly before WWII, Michael went to Germany and gathered information about Nazi Germany for his journalistic writings.
Career
edit1940s
editMichael was very keen to enlist and fight the Nazis. However, Herbert Morrison, Deputy Leader of the Labour Party (25 May 1945 – 2 February 1956) and the London County Council (9 March 1934 – 27 May 1940), declared Michael un-British, a threat to the country, put him on the "forbidden list" as a dangerous communist and said that he should never be allowed to join the military.
Between 1941 and 1949 Michael served as Secretary of the London District Committee of the Communist Party of Great Britain, Secretary of the Party’s Stepney branch and Secretary of the Party’s Architects’ Committee.[4] After WWII, Michael was one of twelve Communist councilors elected in Stepney in 1945 and took office on the Stepney Borough Council.
At the end of 1949 (i.e., shortly after the establishment of the People’s Republic of China), at the invitation of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party, the CPGB sent Michael to China[5] to help with reporting about the new China to foreign readers. The CPGB sent a number of members to China, including Alan Winnington and Douglas (known as Dave) and Janet Springhall. David and Isabel Crook had gone to China in 1947 with an introduction from the CPGB to the Chinese Communist Party to study land reform and were subsequently invited by the CCP to stay and teach English.[6]
Most foreigners stayed for only a few years. However, Michael stayed in China and thus joined the other foreigners who lived in or moved to China to help with building the communist state. The group included Israel and Elsie Epstein, Anna Louise Strong, Rewi Alley, Solomon Adler, and Sidney Rittenberg.
1950s
editMichael’s general political “significance” in the history of international communism was partly his close association with the CPGB. A CPGB party group was formed in the early 1950s with Michael as secretary. He became the main contact between the CPGB and the PRC government - until he broke with the CPGB during the Sino-Soviet split.
In 1951 Michael twice joined the Chinese People’s Volunteers in Korea to report on the war. While there, he tried to persuade British POWs to protest the war and assist Korea. As a result of these activities, he was declared persona non grata by the UK government and his passport was not renewed.[7]
In China, Michael served as an expert at the International News Bureau attached to the General Administration of the Press and at the Xinhua News Agency. He helped train journalists in the fledgling Communist government, particularly those senior journalists assigned to the Agency’s overseas services. He also reported for the Daily Worker in London and was part of the team that translated Mao Zedong’s works into English. He helped polish and finalize the English versions of volumes 2, 3 and 4 of the Selected Works of Mao Zedong, Liu Shaoqi’s “How to Be a Good Communist” and the documents on the Eighth National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party.
In 1958 Michael published “Changing China”. His aim was to explain the purpose behind the seeming contradictions in the expanding and fast-moving life of the new society.
Michael and Jack were actively involved with the Communist Party of Great Britain (Marxist-Leninist). At the time of his death, Jack was its Honorary President.
1960-1972
editBy the 60s, Michael had become a leading figure among China’s foreign friends and in 1965 he called a meeting of the English-speaking foreign residents to show support for China after the US started bombing North Vietnam.[8]
In January 1967, with official government permission, about a hundred foreigners formed the Bethune-Yanan Brigade, a “rebel group” which met for rousing discussions of Maoist ideology.[9] Michael was one of the Brigade’s leaders. The Brigade backed certain Red Guard factions that were later denounced. In August 1967 Michael was one of the expatriates who observed the ransacking of the British Mission in Peking by the Red Guards.
In February 1968, Sid Rittenberg, one of leaders of the Bethune-Yanan Brigade, was arrested and in March 1968 two other leaders, Israel Epstein and Michael were also arrested.[9] They were accused of being spies and were held in Qincheng Prison. Most of those imprisoned were activists in the Brigade. Conditions in the prison were quite difficult – solitary confinement, no outside contacts, little to read, frequent interrogations.[10] Michael was held for 5 years until his release in January 1973.
During the Cultural Revolution, on March 18, 1968, Michael's wife Liu Jinghe and their two sons were imprisoned for ten months in a room in Qianmen, a Beijing hotel. The Epstein and Rittenberg children were also confined in the top floors of the hotel. The windows were papered over and sealed, even during the suffocating summer heat in the city.[10] The boys were in their early teens at the time and it was very challenging being confined to a single room. Liu Jinghe provided their education during that time. After they were allowed to leave, they stayed in a dormitory in Liu Jinghe’s unit and after Michael’s release they moved to the Friendship Hotel..[11]
Later years and death
editIn 1973, as the extremism of the Cultural Revolution declined, the imprisoned foreigners were released and restored to good standing.[12] Despite his travails, Michael remained loyal to Chinese Communism [13] and continued working for the Xinhua News Agency.
Michael developed Parkinson's disease and other ailments. It was speculated these resulted from the harsh conditions he endured during his imprisonment. However, in 1977 he returned to work. He died on September 29, 1986 of heart failure at the age of 76. Michael was posthumously conferred the title of “Honorary Citizen of China” by the Beijing Municipal People’s Government. Deng Xiaoping hailed him as “a staunch international soldier and sincere friend of the Chinese people.”[11][7]
After Michael’s death, his brother Jack established a prize for journalism students in Michael’s name.[11]
Personal life
editIn October 1941 he married Eileen Murray (daughter of Sir John Murray Murray, Chief Justice of Southern Rhodesia 1955-1961). They had one daughter Sallie (born 1942) then divorced in 1945.
In August 1952 he married Liu Jinghe, who was born in born in Minhou, Fujian, in 1911. She graduated from the Department of Biochemistry at Jinling Women's University in Nanjing in 1932, and from the Senior Nursing School of Peking Union Medical College in 1936. She obtained a master's degree from the University of Minnesota and a doctorate in child development from Columbia University. After returning to China in 1950, she worked in the Institute of Psychology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. She was a member of the Chinese Communist Party, a representative of the National People's Congress and an executive committee member of the All China Women's Federation. She was one of the academic leaders of the psychology of child development and educational psychology in China. She died December 12, 2004.
Liu Jinghe and Michael had two boys, Solomon (born 1954, died 2020) and Roger (born 1958). In August 1981, Solomon married Xiao Yang (also called ShaSha or Daisy), the daughter of a high-ranking military official who was on the Long March with Mao Zedong. Roger never married.
Publications
edit- Heartbreak Homes: An Indictment of the National Government’s Housing Policy London. Communist Party of Great Britain, (1935) 13pp
- Michael Best: The Tenant’s Guide London. Labour Research Department, (1938) 54pp
- Michael Best: War Injury and War Damage: Your Rights to Compensation. London. Federation of Tenants’ and Residents’ Research Associations, Labor Research Department. (1940) 32pp
- How to speed up the repairs: why the delay? why are empty houses still not requisitioned? who is to blame? what can be done about it? London. Communist Party of Great Britain, (1944)
- Changing China (Lawrence & Wishart, London, 1958)
References
edit- ^ a b Redfern, Neil. "Michael Shapiro, a Communist Life in Britain and China".
- ^ "Michael Shapiro: A Life".
- ^ Allan, John (1992). Berthold Lubetkin: Architecture and the Tradition of Progress. RIBA Publications Ltd. ISBN 0947877622.
- ^ Xinhua News Agency. "Speech at the Memorial Meeting for Michael Shapiro".
- ^ Hooper, Beverley (2016). Foreigners Under Mao: Western Lives in China, 1949-1976. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press. pp. 20–46. ISBN 978-988-8208-74-6.
- ^ Crook, David (1990). The Autobiography of David Crook: Hampstead Heath to Tian An Men. davidcrook.net.
- ^ a b "Celebration and Social to Honour Comrade Jack Shapiro". Lalkar. September 1, 2007.
- ^ Brady, Anne-Marie (2003). Making the Foreign Serve China: Managing foreigners in the People's Republic. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Inc. ISBN 0742518612.
- ^ a b Donohue, Michael (September 1, 2008). "The Expatriate". The National.
- ^ a b Epstein, Israel (2005). My China Eye: Memoirs of a Jew and a Journalist (1st ed.). San Francisco, CA: Long River Press. ISBN 1-59265-042-2.
- ^ a b c Sweet, Matthew (November 4, 2011). "Michael Shapiro, from Stepney to Peking". Spitalfields Life.
- ^ Milton, David (1976). The Wind Will Not Subside: Years in Revolutionary China 1964-1969. Pantheon Books. ISBN 0394485556.
- ^ Buchanan, Tom (2012). East Wind: China and the British Left, 1925–1976. Oxford University Press. pp. 131–223. ISBN 978-0-19-957033-1.