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  Letter from Don and Wei Hong Snow in China  
     
 

May 21, 2002

Dear Friends,

China Notes #4

I (Don) am just back from visiting schools and Amity teachers in Nanjing, as well as helping decide on placements for the incoming teachers. Over the week in Nanjing I had a chance to catch up with a number of PC(USA) teachers in China, so am reminded that maybe this is a good time to introduce other people who are working in China with full or partial support from PC(USA).

The Amity Teacher Project

As you probably all know, for the past 17 years the PC(USA) has sent English teachers to China under the auspices of the Amity
Foundation. This is done through the Church World Service in conjunction with many other denominations. Because many teachers have
support from more than one denomination I don't always know who's support is primarily from the PC(USA), but as best I can make it
out, there are currently seven regular Amity teachers in this category:

  • Suzanne Weber taught in Yangzhou (Jiangsu) for four years in the 1990s, and now teaches in Nanjing (Jiangsu). In addition to teaching English and learning Chinese, she has also found time to get married and become a mother!
  • Robbie Wellington has been teaching in Weifang (Shandong province) since 1998, and has learned most of the Chinese language in the process.
  • Susie Smith also began teaching in China in 1998, and teaches at Zaozhuang Teachers College in Shandong. Susie is generally recognized as the Teacher Project's artist in residence, and is the one called on when there is a need for art work.
  • Also 1998 arrivals, Lynn and Jon Hilton teach at Huzhou Teachers College in Zhejiang province. Lynn first came to China as a teacher in Amity's Summer English Program, and liked it so much she signed up to teach in the regular academic year program, bringing her husband Jon along with her.
  • Caroline Sunquist, teaching in Yuncheng (Shanxi), is relatively new to the Teacher Project, but not to Asia: She previously lived in Singapore and came to China already knowing quite a bit of Chinese.
  • Hugh Wire has spent the last year teaching at China Pharmaceutical University in Nanjing. Given that he has previously worked for Church World Service, as well as being a pastor in the PC(USA), he is helping Amity gain a better understanding of how to build its support base in North America.
  • Two other PC(USA) personnel, Kim and John Strong, are on direct assignment from the PC(USA) to the Amity Teacher Project. Both teach part-time at the Jiangsu Institute of Education and also provide administrative support for the Teacher Project. Kim is coordinator of the Summer English Program, a program with which she has been involved for over a decade. John serves Amity in the area of communications through such things as working with videos and editing the Teacher Project's in-house newsletter, the Echo.
  • Last but not least, Amity teacher Ann Wire has a unique role in that she is teaching New Testament at Nanjing Union Theological Seminary. A faculty member at San Francisco Theological Seminary, Ann was born in China of missionary parents, and when the opportunity arose for her to teach at the seminary in Nanjing she insisted that the arrangement include her, as well as husband Hugh, as part of the Teacher Project.

Shenyang

There are five PC(USA) personnel serving in the city of Shenyang in northeastern China. The work of two couples is focused primarily
on the Korean minority population in that region.

  • Min Young and Ho Ban have served the Korean Vocational School in Shenyang for the past several years. Ho works in the area of computer science.
  • Recently, Min Young and Ho have been joined by Sun Hee and Andy Chang-Hyun Yoo, whose responsibilities include teaching English for Shenyang's Xita church.
  • Barbara Penny is also in Shenyang, teaching at Shenyang Teachers College. Before going to Shenyang, Barbara taught for several years in Nanjing through Amity, and she continues to assist Amity teachers in professional areas such as the teaching of composition.

United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia (UB)

Susan and Jay Boone have served at universities in several Chinese cities—Suzhou, Hangzhou, and most recently Changchun—under the
auspices of PC(USA) and the United Board. Jay is a specialist in law and economics, while Susan teaches English. They first began work with China when Jay was invited by the Chinese government to help set up their oil-exploration-related laws at the time China and the U.S. normalized relations, and Susan and Jay have subsequently spent most of the last two decades teaching in China.

Hong Kong

As you already know, Wei Hong and I are PC(USA) personnel based in Hong Kong. I work for the Amity Teacher Project from the Hong Kong Amity Office, and Wei Hong works at the library of Lutheran Theological Seminary. What you may not know is that much of the financial support for the coordinator of Amity's Hong Kong Office, Theresa Carino, is also provided through the PC(USA). Theresa has been involved with Amity for a long time, first as founder and director of the Philippine-China Resource Development Center, then as editor of the Amity Newsletter.

Additionally, the PC(USA) provides part of the support for Judy Chan, who works in the area of staff development and public relations for the Hong Kong Christian Council.

The point of all this is that the PC(USA) has a pretty impressive cast of characters serving China, both in terms of experience and sheer longevity, and we can all use your prayers. The level of support provided by the PC(USA) for people serving China also shows that the PC(USA)'s long-standing commitment to China is still strong.

God's peace,

Don Snow

The 2002 Mission Yearbook for Prayer & Study, p. 179

 
     
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