| "DEATH
TO THE FOREIGNER!" Hopes
were high as the new century dawned. Few had any idea that the most severe blow
ever dealt to Protestant missions would soon engulf China. The
white-haired Chinese pastor could barely walk, but he had come to say goodbye.
Guo neng mie; jiao mie bu liao - Kingdoms may perish, but the
Church can never be destroyed, he said, knowing that, just by talking to
the missionaries, he was risking his life. Soon the foreigners would depart on
a hazardous 1000-mile journey to freedom, and Pastor Song, one of thousands of
Chinese Christians, would die a martyrs death at the hands of the Boxers.
It was 1900, but the seeds of the tragedy had been sown some 40 years earlier.
The
Peking Convention of 1860 gave foreigners many privileges and allowed missionaries
to own land in Chinas interior. Buildings sprang up and the Roman Catholic
Church became a great landowner. More and more missionaries arrived to work in
schools, colleges and hospitals. Although
they introduced Western science and technology and did much good, the missionaries
nevertheless managed to stir up a good deal of resentment. Some abused the privileges
given to them under the treaty, while others showed astonishing insensitivity
towards Chinese culture and customs. And whilst the missionaries in the coastal
treaty ports lived in relative comfort, the majority of those they were seeking
to reach lived in appalling squalor. Chinas
humiliating defeat by Japan in 1895, which resulted in the loss of Taiwan and
the recognition of Koreas independence, was the final straw. Increasingly,
the Western powers sought to carve China up into different spheres of foreign
influence. When
two German missionaries were murdered in 1897, Germany, Russia, France and England
seized a number of strategic Chinese ports in revenge. The Empress Dowager Ci
Xi, also known as the Old Buddha, was alive with wrath and angry
beyond words. Rather
than fighting back against the hated oppressors, the young Emperor Guang Xu started
to reform and Westernise China. The reforms, one of which proposed that all idol
temples should close and then be reopened as schools and colleges, generated stiff
opposition. When
rebellion, uprising and riot broke out, the reactionary Empress Dowager resumed
the reins of government, imprisoned Guang Xu in his own palace, executed the reformers
and reversed their edicts. Their demands for modernising China were shelved and,
as Hudson Taylor wrote, there appeared little hope of averting a complete
collapse. As
anti-foreign feeling swept across China, so membership of a secret society, the
Righteous and Harmonious fists(they were nicknamed Boxers because
they believed that, through martial arts and ritual boxing, they would become
impervious to bullets) grew rapidly. Their slogan: mie yang - destroy
the foreigner. The
movement flourished under imperial protection and spread like wildfire. Foreign
missionaries were attacked, as were Chinese Christians, who were referred to as
secondary devils and regarded as traitors. In
November 1898, whilst travelling in West China, Hudson Taylor heard how William
S Fleming, an Australian, had become the first CIM martyr. Fleming died trying
to protect his friend and assistant Pan Shoushan, a Black Miao convert. Pan Shoushan
was also martyred. Up
to then, Taylor had taken comfort from the fact that for 32 years not one CIM
missionary had died as a result of violence. How sad the tidings!
he wrote to Deputy Director John Stevenson. Blessed for the martyrs but
sad for us, for China, for their friends
Doubtless it means fuller blessing,
but through deeper suffering. At
the end of 1899, a missionary from the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel
in Foreign Parts was murdered. The British authorities protested vigorously, threatening
to send troops to China in order to ensure the safety of foreign residents. But
the Empress Dowager would have none of this. On 24 June 1900, she issued a decree
ordering the destruction of all foreign devils. The hated barbarians
were to be driven out of China. THE
SLAUGHTER BEGAN IN EARNEST Westerners and Chinese Christians were hunted
down, and houses, schools and churches burnt to the ground. In July lurid headlines
such as Chinese massacre missionaries and Hundreds feared dead
began to appear in British newspapers. Increasingly
frail, and already over-taxed through frequent travel, Taylor, then aged nearly
70, finally broke down and was taken to the Swiss mountains to recover. Telegram
after telegram came through, telling of riots, massacres and the martyrdom of
missionaries. Convalescing in Davos, Switzerland, Taylor said, I cannot
read. I cannot think. I cannot even pray, but I can trust. The
deaths were horrific. Some missionaries were beaten and burned to death, others
were tortured and beheaded. Chang Yuwen, a 17-year-old Chinese Christian, was
cut into pieces and his body nailed to a wall in Tangshan, Hebei Province. Others
were shot, stabbed, stoned, run over by carts or strangled. Chen Xikong, another
Christian in Hebei Province, had his heart cut out and placed on a stone. Some
missionaries died, still kneeling in prayer. CIM
worker Gilbert Ritchie wrote, Alas, only a very few of my beloved fellow
missionaries in the province of Shanxi escaped the blood-stained hands of the
Boxers. One of those martyred was Ritchies Chinese helper, a converted
Buddhist priest. Although
in some areas the local authorities attempted to protect the Westerners, in many
parts of the country chaos reigned supreme. The Boxers entered Tianjin waving
the heads of murdered missionaries, and were joined by imperial troops. The situation
deteriorated rapidly. As a news agency put it, It is all China against the
foreigner. While
hundreds fled to the coast under conditions of considerable hardship, others poured
into Beijing to escape the massacre, taking shelter in the Foreign Legations.
Encircled by the Boxers, they were besieged for two months; beating off repeated
attacks and living in the most appalling conditions. On
27 July an international eight-nation army stormed Tianjin and fought its way
to Beijing, despite determined resistance from the well-equipped Chinese. Eventually,
on 14 August 1900, it relieved the Legations, which had less than a weeks
food left, and drove the Boxers from Beijing. The
Empress Dowager and her hostage Guang Xu, disguised as peasants and carrying vast
quantities of treasure, fled to Xian. The occupying forces, meanwhile, looted
the city and burned down imperial palaces and temples. Negotiations
with the foreign powers began. On 7 September 1901 a peace treaty was signed by
the Manchu government and the Western nations, who demanded the stationing of
allied troops in Beijing and the main ports, commercial concessions and some $330
million in damages. Though
the CIM suffered more than any other mission in China, Taylor refused to accept
payment for loss of property of life, to show the meekness and gentleness
of Christ. Though criticised by some, he was commended by the British Foreign
Office, whose minister in Beijing donated £200 to the CIM, expressing his
admiration and sympathy. The Chinese were also touched by Taylors
attitude. Despite
everything they had experienced, those who survived remained free of bitterness
and hatred. One missionary, dying on the way to Hanzhou, whispered to her husband,
I wish I could have lived, I wish I could have gone back there to tell the
people more about Jesus. Those who escaped death, but had lost everything
else, had only one thought - to return to their beloved Chinese as soon as possible.
It
is a wonderful honour
to have among us so many counted worthy of a martyrs
crown, wrote Taylor, Some who have been spared have perhaps suffered
more than some of those taken, and our Lord will not forget. The
terrific strain of the Boxer Uprising had taken its toll so, feeling he might
die at any time, Taylor decided to retire. He appointed D E Hoste as Acting General
Director and died four years later in 1905. He was 73. By
now, things had returned to normal, despite the crippling conditions imposed by
the West. The Empress Dowager returned, duly chastened, and was soon taking tea
with Westerners as if nothing had happened. She died in 1908, having given instructions
for Guang Xu to be poisoned. She outlived him by one day, not realising that the
Manchu dynasty itself had only three years to live. [Gary
Clayton © OMF International, 2000]
| Those
martyred | |
| 30,000
Chinese Roman Catholics | |
| 2000
Chinese Protestants | |
| 35
Protestant missionaries, 53 children |
| | 47
Roman Catholic priests & nuns | |
|
CIM
losses - 58 missionaries, 21 children |
| Results
of the Uprising | |
| Hudson
Taylor hands over the leadership of the mission he founded. |
| | Increased
openness due to Chinese believers willingness to die for Christ & the
missionaries refusal to accept compensation. |
| | Missionaries
emphasise leadership training & turn over greater responsibility to Chinese
colleagues. | |
| An
increase in the number of missionaries to China from the West & in converts
to Christianity in China. | |
| The
eventual overthrow of the 2000-year-old dynasty & the establishment of a Nationalist
Republic. | | A
Thousand Miles of Miracle | | | is
A. E. Glovers gripping account of his familys escape from the Boxers.
This new edition includes a substantial section of Glovers letters home,
along with eight pages of photographs. |
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