Showing posts with label REV. LUDVIG WILLER. Show all posts
Showing posts with label REV. LUDVIG WILLER. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Can We Get Out? (May-June, 1946)


As we mentioned in a previous post, after the surrender of the Japanese in 1945, World War II ended but not the oppression. On August 8, 1945, shortly before the Japanese acknowledged defeat, the Soviets declared war on Japan and invaded Manchuria. They were followed a year later by the Chinese Communists.

As Danish author Kirsten Berggreen Buch put it, "[W]hen the Japanese 'pulled out', the first to pour in across the border were Soviet troops, and as they pulled out they were followed by the Eighth Route Army …".

Before long, Manchuria was under the domination of the Chinese Communists. They harassed the Danish missionaries and Chinese Christians in various ways and burdened the hospital at Siuyen by filling it with patients from their army.

By mid-1946, most of the Danish missionaries who had spent the war years in Manchuria were exhausted. D.M.S. called them back to Denmark for a much-needed rest, with the plan to send replacements from among those who had been confined in Denmark. According to Jensen and Pedersen, “The precarious situation made 35 Danish missionaries and 21 children leave China in 1946 followed by more in 1947.”

Due to the political situation, the missionaries’ departure was more in the nature of an escape than an orderly leave on a furlough. Kirsten Berggreen Buch related: “Many dramatic departures took place in 1945-1946. Long day’s walks over the mountains with children, travel in freight cars and so on (exactly as during the Boxer rebellion . . .).”

Anna Bøg left Siuyen on May 23, 1946, just 10 days after her 58th birthday. On June 8, 1946, she wrote the letter below from Antung [now called Dandong] to Elise Bahnson in Denmark who was to return soon to Siuyen.

At the end of this post (after the listing of sources), we tell a little about the various persons and places to which Anna Bøg refers unless they are already familiar to our readers from previous posts.
"My dear Lise!

"I received your letter No. 4 on 12 May, Sunday, at noon, when suddenly Hogsgaard and Gjaerulf Larsen appeared, each of them carrying a heavy backpack. They had walked from Haich’eng, been to Mukden, Tientsin [now called Tianjin] to negotiate travel home and then passed by Siuyen to speed up our leave. United Nations Relief [Association] promised to help us depart from Antung, either by plane or by ship. Last summer I stored most of your belongings. Most of what we have is now in the three rooms upstairs. The rooms below are rented to a Mr. Tung. The whole men’s station is in the hands of the Communists, the school is in Bjergaarde’s house and the Communists live in the other houses. Half of the hospital is also occupied by them, and also Dr. [Niels] Nielsen’s house. [Dr.] Marie [Nielsen], Gudrun and all the nurses live in the old doctor’s house.

"My last image of our wonderful church was of a large people’s meeting, the leader’s picture hung on the Cross, the church full of Communist inscriptions and men forced to sit there for seven days of meetings. Everything on the church square was trampled down. Things were locked up in the loft. They broke in and stole them, among other things the carpet. For a long time the church was used for education purposes, later as a dormitory. The benches were placed outside on the church square and were ruined by the rain. Some of the benches were taken to the theatre. Windows were smashed, et cetera. For a while they lived in the street chapel and held meetings there. Now it is rented to opium smokers and shopkeepers. The whole town is filled with Communists. Many rich people have been robbed of everything. The last 9-10 months have been worse than during the Japanese occupation. How much suffering and tears. Nobody looked happy. First vandalized by the Russians and then by the Communists.

"Sunday 19 May the congregation organized a very beautiful farewell party for Busch and myself. Just about everybody was present and all of us grieved. It was so difficult for me to leave them, especially at this moment. I should have preferred to stay until things settled down a little. For a long time we had prayed that it might be in God’s hour, so we believe it has come.

"A.B. Nielsen, Mrs. Christensen, Busch and I departed 23 May with an open Communist truck. We sat high up on a load of peanuts. The truck broke down all the time. The second day Mrs. Christensen and A.B.N. left the truck and walked to Kushan. Miss Busch is very weak. She would not be able to do that. She and I arrived in Kushan only on the fourth day, with all the luggage ruined by the rain. The last bit Ellen Nielsen’s cart picked us up. We have now been two weeks in Antung.

"Busch and I are staying with the Bertelsens. Tomorrow the intention is that Willers, G. Larsen, Ulf and Aagaard with Helga will put on their backpacks and start their trip home. We all, the Bolwigs included, must wait and see what shows up. The airfield is demolished. When starting we thought we would continue immediately and are carrying only clothes for a plane trip. We are very well off at Dorthe’s [Dorthea Bertelsen's] and are enjoying the rest after the first trip. Busch is also well but has little strength. Our hearts are in Siuyen; we know nothing about how they are. Rumors say there is fighting in there. But now a 15-day cease-fire begins. Can we get out? Your first three letters I have not received. Siuyen has been cut off. . . . The women look forward with pleasure to your arrival, may it happen.

"Best regards from Busch and yours ever. Anna."
Sources:
Bøg-Madsen, Anna; letter to Elise Bahnson written from Antung, June 8, 1946, from the D.M.S. Archives in the Rigsarkivet. Courtesy of Kirsten Berggreen Buch.
Buch, Kirsten Berggreen; letters to the authors, dated December 8, 1998, March 6, 1999, December 23, 1999, and March 3, 2005.
Dansk Kvindebiografisk Leksikon, biography of Dr. Marie Nielsen.
D.M.S. Missionary Album, 1950.
Jensen, Anne Hviid, I Lys Og Skygge (Unitas Forlag, Copenhagen, 2005), pp. 159-163.
Jensen and Pedersen, "China – A fact-finding visit – April 2002", p. 3.
Gullach-Jensen, Thyra; D.M.S. i Manchuriet, (D.M.S., Copenhagen, 1937), pp. 54-55, 72, 93-94, 113-115.

Image:
Contemporary photograph of Antung, from Wikimedia Commons. Some rights reserved.
All D.M.S. items used with permission.
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Persons and places mentioned in the letter:

"Hogsgaard" - Rev. Jens Lind Hogsgaard. Rev. Hogsgaard was born May 4, 1899 in Nørre Nissum by Lemvig. He served in Manchuria from 1929-1947. Beginning in 1931, he was in charge of the work with men in Changchun/ Hsinking. In 1935, he married Anna Oline Meinertsen, another missionary. In 1946, he took over chairmanship of the Manchurian missions from Rev. Neils Buch. Previously he had been deputy chairman

"Gjaerulf Larsen" - Rev. Erik Gjaerulf Larsen. Rev. Larsen was born January 11, 1908, in Helsingør . Until 1934 he was the secretary of K.F.U.M. [Y.M.C.A.] in Aalborg. In 1934, he was sent to Manchuria where he headed K.F.U.M.’s work in Antung. His experiences in Manchuria are related in the book Sol Opstaar og Sol Nedgaar – Manchuriet 1934-1946 [The Sun Rises and the Sun Sets, Manchuria 1934-1946]; (D.M.S., Hellerup, 1989).

"Gudrun" - Gudrun Budtz Christensen, a nurse at Siuyen Hospital.

"Busch" - Anna Busch. Miss Busch was the head nurse at Siuyen Hospital. She has been mentioned in many earlier posts. She had survived typhoid fever. Because she had been seriously ill, she was weak and could not, like the others, put on her backpack and walk across the mountains.

"Mrs. Christensen" - Helga Christensen. Mrs. Christensen was the sister-in-law of Rev. Axel Christensen. She was not a missionary. She had gone to China to keep house for her brother-in-law until his wife could join him, then was prevented from leaving by the onset of World War II.

"A.B. Nielsen" - Anna Bothilde Nielsen. Miss Nielsen was born on May 31, 1899 in Esbjerg. She came to Manchuria in 1928 and in 1930 she was assigned to Suihuafu Hospital where by the mid-1930s she was head nurse. After leaving China, she was transferred to Aden where the D.M.S. had a small mission.

"Kushan" - Takushan (a town south of Siuyen and west of Antung), also known as Gushan, and Dagushan. Takushan means “Great Lonesome Mountain”.

"Ellen Nielsen" - Ellen Nielsen was born July 17, 1871 in Bregninge, Sjaelland. She was a missionary based in Takushan beginning in 1899. She accomplished a large number of missionary works, including the establishment of a nursery school, a girl’s school, a senior high school, a teacher’s college, and a trade school. She became a Chinese citizen, remained in Takushan when the other missionaries left Manchuria, and died there in 1960.

"Bertelsens" - Dr. Peter Bertelsen and his wife Dorothea Bech Andersen. The Bertelsens served in Manchuria from 1931 to 1947, first in Siuyen and then from 1938 onward in Antung.

"Willers" - Rev. and Mrs. Ludvig Willer - For information regarding the Willers see our post The Death of Helga Johansen (October, 1944)

"Ulf" - Ulf was a teenager of 15 or 16. We do not know his surname. Although not a missionary child, he had attended the school for the children of the Danish missionaries in Antung while his father, a businessman, was based in Japan.

"Aagaard with Helga" - Rev. Anders Aagaard Poulsen and his daughter Helga Aagaard Poulsen. Rev. Aagaard Poulsen was born July 16, 1880 in Thorning by Viborg. He and his wife, Margrethe Leth, were sent to Manchuria by the D.M.S. in 1912. They served in Harbin and Pitsaikou, where Rev. Poulsen headed the school for male evangelists. Margrethe Aagaard Poulsen died in Manchuria from typhoid fever in 1944. She had contracted the disease while providing nursing care for Chinese patients. By the time of Anna Bøg's letter, the couple's four oldest children had gone back to Denmark. The youngest, Helga, was still with her father in Manchuria.

"Bolwigs" - Rev. and Mrs. Conrad Bolwig. Conrad Sophus Bolwig was born September 16, 1866 in Nykirke by Vejle. In 1891, he married Minna Gudrun Hass. The Bolwigs were pioneer missionaries who had lived in Takushan since the beginning of the Danish missions in Manchuria. At the time of Anna Bøg's letter, Rev. Bolwig was 80 and Mrs. Bolwig was 79.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

The Death of Helga Johansen (October, 1944)


As we mentioned in our post about Dr. Marie Nielsen, there was a typhoid outbreak in Manchuria in 1944 and the Japanese required Siuyen Hospital to admit typhoid patients from a nearby forced-labor camp despite the risk to the other patients and hospital staff. Dr. Marie, head nurse Anna Busch, and nurse Helga Johansen all contracted the disease. Dr. Marie and Anna Busch survived. Sadly, Helga Johansen did not.

In her 1937 book on the D.M.S. missions in Manchuria, Gullach-Jensen wrote this entry about Helga Johansen, who was a brand-new missionary at that time:
"During her childhood and youth, she heard about God and respected him, but only about the age of 19 did she learn to know Jesus Christ as her Savior, and shortly after that she realized that her future work should be in the missionary field.

"With this as her goal, she started training to be a nurse. After finishing her training at Skive Hospital, Miss Johansen addressed herself to D.M.S. with a request to be sent out as a missionary, but at that time it was not possible.

"During the wait, Miss Johansen worked as a community nurse and as a trainee at 'Marthabo' and finally she went to a Bible school in Glasgow. In October 1936, D.M.S. sent her to Manchuria. After a short stay in our mission field, she went to the language school in Peking, from where she sent her first letter to the Dansk Missionsblad (Bl. 1937, pages 176-177).

"The intention is that Miss Johansen shall start working shortly, first at the missionary hospital in Suihuafu and thereafter in Siuyen."
In her first letter home to the D.M.S., written in 1937 while she was in language school in Peking, Helga Johansen wrote about Chinese Christian art. We began our post on that topic with her discussion. In the same letter, she spoke about her early experiences in China and her growing love for the Chinese people:
"In this my first greeting from China, I want to send a heartfelt thanks both to the D.M.S. Board and to the Friends all over the country. Thank you for sending me out as your envoy. These first months have been rich in experiences and encouragements. It was a great pleasure to be received and welcomed by the Danish missionaries in Manchuria. The first three weeks I stayed with Miss [Karen] Gormsen. But greatest thing of all is being permitted to discover how God's love towards this country and its people grew in my heart and thus confirmed me in my missionary vocation.

"Language study is very interesting. It is like going on a voyage of discovery trying to find out what those mysterious signs and squiggles mean. It requires hard work, but it also brings joy when what first seems hopeless and unintelligible gradually becomes clear. We are about 150 language students, of which about 80 live at the school; 15 nations are represented. I am the only one from Denmark."
She continued the letter with her discussion of Chinese Christian art which we already posted, and then signed the letter, "Affectionate greetings, Your joyful envoy, Helga Johansen."

Anna Bøg's accounting letter to Axel Christensen of October 25, 1944, contained the following entry about the death of this enthusiastic and "joyful envoy" after only seven years of missionary service:
"You probably have heard that H. Johansen died October 16, at 2:00 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Willer* came in the 20th, and she was buried on Sunday the 22nd. A very beautiful funeral. First a Danish service in her room, then a Chinese service in the Hospital yard. All the nurses, men and girls, carried her to the cemetery, her casket covered with Dannebrog [the Danish flag], and all the nurses clad in white . . . In the evening, we had a Danish Communion. . . ."
Sources:
Bøg-Madsen, Anna; accounting letter to Axel Christensen; October 25, 1944, from the D.M.S. archives in the Rigsarkivet. Courtesy of Kirsten Berggreen Buch. Original in English.
Gullach-Jensen, Thyra; D.M.S. i Manchuriet (D.M.S., Copenhagen, 1937), pp. 125-126. Translated by Preben Jørgensen.
Johansen, Helga; "En Hilsen fra Peking," Dansk Missionsblad; Vol. 104, Nr. 12, 1937 (exact date unknown); pp. 176-177. Translated by Preben Jørgensen
All D.M.S. items used with permission.

Image:
Photograph of Helga Johansen from the Dansk Missionsblad; Vol. 110, Nr. 44, November 26, 1943, p. 626
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*"Mr. and Mrs. Willer" - This refers to Rev. and Mrs. Ludvig Willer. Rev. Willer was born on October 7, 1900. He was the son of the pastor in Aulum. He obtained his theology degree in 1924, was the secretary for K.F.U.M. in Horsens until 1927, then a pastor until 1933. D.M.S. sent him to Manchuria in 1934. He was based in Dairen. (Jensen, D.M.S. i Manchuriet, pp. 22-23.)