From early in its history, the
University of Nanking was also distinctive in terms of the quality
of its program. Of China's Christian colleges, it had a student
body second in size only to that of Yenching University (Beijing),
and in a 1925 study these two universities were rated as the best
of the Christian colleges in China.
One way that many of the Christian colleges contributed to China
was through pioneering new fields of study. In this regard, the
University of Nanking was best known for its work in agriculture
and forestry. This is somewhat surprising, given the university's
urban setting; however, its forestry and agriculture departments
were not only among China's first, but also soon came to be among
its best, and led the way in trying to bring the resources of
science to the problems of rural life in China.
Throughout its history, many Presbyterians have played an important
role of the life of the University of Nanking. For example, the
agricultural work of the university grew initially out of the
famine relief efforts of a Presbyterian missionary faculty member,
Joseph Bailie, during the great drought of 1911. The pioneering
rural survey work of Presbyterian Lossing Buck in the 1930s was
also a major milestone in the university's agricultural work,
resulting in studies which are still used as important reference
material even today. Of course, the most famous is Nobel Prize-winning
author Pearl Buck, who taught as a Presbyterian missionary in
the Department of English Literature from 1920 to 1933. (Faculty
and graduate students here still study her life and work today.)
Like all of the Christian colleges, Nanjing University was taken
over as a government educational institution in the early 1950s.
However, since China and the United States re-established ties
in 1979, Presbyterians have continued to serve the university
in various ways. In the early 1980s, Philip and Janice Wickeri
taught at Nanjing University as two of the first Americans to
teach in China after the Cultural Revolution. The tie continued
through Presbyterian teachers Barbara Penny and Suzanne Webber,
placed at the university through the Amity Foundation (which is
literally right down the street from the front gate of the campus
and housed in a building that was originally the home of a Nanjing
University president). And today I train language teachers in
the graduate program of Nanjing University's English Department.
Even before 1949, Nanjing University was very much a Chinese
university, and it has obviously been even more so since then.
However, it is also an institution with which Presbyterians have
engaged in a long and fruitful partnership.
The 2005 Mission Yearbook for Prayer & Study, p.
245 |