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New medics learn about Norman Bethune's spirit of sacrifice
2021-04-13 
Local medical workers visit the Bethune Memorial House in Wuhan, Hubei province.[Photo provided to China Daily]

About eight decades ago, Norman Bethune, a member of the Canadian Communist Party and a well-known thoracic surgeon, came to China during the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression (1931-45). During his stay in the country, he helped to save thousands of lives but died of blood poisoning in 1939.

His humanitarian contribution to China has been commemorated by generations of Chinese people. His legacy, particularly, is being invoked as the country prepares to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Communist Party of China this summer.

Wuhan in Hubei province was the first Chinese inland city Bethune and his medical team visited in January 1938 after being dispatched by the Canadian Communist Party and the Communist Party of the United States.

At the time, the city was victim to a frantic bombing campaign by the Japanese invaders, and Bethune led his team, working day and night for a week, to save wounded Chinese soldiers at a clinic, which is now known as the Fifth Hospital of Wuhan, says Li Shaoting, who works at the Bethune Memorial House in Wuhan.

There is another part of Bethune's China story that is less known.

On Jan 20, 1938, Zhou Enlai, then a leader of the CPC's Eighth Route Army, met with Bethune and his team, briefing them on the circumstances of the war and saying "there is nothing we can give you, except for difficult work; and there is nothing you can gain, except for the gratitude of the injured and the sick".

During his short stay in Wuhan, Bethune visited a local army hospital where he was shocked by the musty smell, reused gauze, broken glass and patients who had died before getting treatment, says Song Jian, deputy director of the Wuhan Municipal CPC History Research Office.

Later, Bethune got to know from Jiang Qixian, an army official, about the shortage of medicine and equipment on the front line. He reported the circumstances back home, and soon got bandages and other medical supplies from overseas donors.

"Bethune's experience in Wuhan was important in his China journey, as he learned about the army's determination to fight fascism and strengthened his resolve to help on the front line," says Song. "The brave and unyielding spirit of the heroic city of Wuhan also impressed him."

A statue of Norman Bethune is a major attraction at the site.[Photo provided to China Daily]

To publicize this history, the Bethune Memorial House was set up in Wuhan in July 2010. It functions as an education base for all new local medics before being sent to their medical facilities.

A training class is held for new medical workers. Participants learn the stories of Bethune and take a vow in front of his statue. So far, more than 2,100 local medical staff members have attended classes and completed the oath-taking ceremony, as arranged by the Wuhan Municipal Health Commission.

The aim is to encourage them to learn from Bethune's professionalism and his spirit of self-sacrifice, according to the organizers of the activities. However, the classes have been suspended since last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The memorial house is located in the Fifth Hospital of Wuhan, which was one of the first designated hospitals for COVID-19 patients. When the outbreak hit the city, the hospital received an average 1,030 patients every day, and the daily peak reached 1,970 by early 2020.

Xu Ying, 46, director of the blood and endocrinology department at the hospital, says she began to learn about Bethune's Wuhan story after the founding of the memorial house, and was quite moved.

During the early stage of the outbreak, everyone was unprepared for virus, and all medics regarded working on the front line as their responsibility.

"We shared the same humanitarian spirit as that of Bethune. It needs solidarity and cooperation to save people's lives," she says.

Contact the writers through chenmeiling@chinadaily.com.cn

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