Rich in wonder and full of adventure, this is the story of a German woman missionary in the South Pacific and Japan. Filled with a sense of religious mission, it also gives us a perspective on what drove individuals to go beyond the normal confines of their lives and societies to carry out the missionary outreach that played such a significant role in many parts of the world during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Using her own voice, the story of Rose Notehelfer traces the extraordinary journey, both physical and spiritual, that took her from her native roots in a little German village to the far reaches of the Pacific and East Asia. Originally intending to go to China with the German branch of the China Inland Mission, she ended up being sent instead to a small group of islands near Truk in the South Pacific ? as a circuit teacher, preacher, and nurse. Later, through a complicated series of events, she came to Japan where she married another German missionary and lived and worked with her young family during World War II. The description of her life during that period presents a vivid account of what it was like for a Westerner living in Japan during the war.
This important social survey, first published in 192l, and illustrated with over fifty photographs and nearly forty maps and diagrams, contains invaluable data from questionnaires collected from a cross-section of the population of Peking between September 1918 and December 1919. The result is a comprehensive record of all aspects of life and conditions in the capital – from government, health and education, to commercial life, recreation, poverty and philanthropy. In the Foreword, we are reminded of the fact that ‘...the timeliness of this survey is significant. China is in the midst of a vast transition, and it is essential that the Orient, as far as possible, be saved from the costly mistakes made by the Occident.’ This landmark survey provides an invaluable point of reference vis-à-vis modern China in a period of unparalleled economic and industrial growth and social transformation.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.