- David Crook
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David Crook (born London, August 14, 1910; died Beijing, November 1, 2000). A committed Marxist from 1931, he joined the International Brigades during the Spanish Civil War. After being wounded on his first day at the front, he was returned to a hospital in Madrid. While in Madrid, he was recruited by the KGB to spy on those whom the Stalinists called Trotskyites, a group which included George Orwell. Crook later expressed regret for his part in the deaths of innocent members of the Workers' Party of Marxist Unification (POUM). The KGB then sent him to China. There he taught English at Saint John's University, Shanghai in order to spy on a Trotskyite whose arguments in fact began to convince him. Crook proceeded to Chengdu where he was bombed by the Japanese and met his eventual wife, Isabel Brown, daughter of Canadian missionaries.
Hitler's invasion of Russia in June 1941 ended this fling with Trotskyism. Upon his return to England, Crook re-joined the British Communist Party and the Royal Air Force, then married Isabel. During the war, he worked for British intelligence throughout Asia and contacted local communist movements. After study at University of London, the Crooks returned to China to teach English in a rural school which trained staff for the foreign service of the future government. They entered Beijing with the victorious Communists in 1949. For the next forty years, the Crooks taught at the Peking First Foreign Languages Institute (now the Beijing Foreign Studies University).
The Crooks published Revolution in a Chinese Village, Ten Mile Inn (London: Routledge & Paul, 1959; reprinted: New York: Pantheon Books, 1979) and The First Years of Yangyi Commune (London: Routledge & K. Paul, 1966).
Despite his long time loyalty to the Chinese Communist Party, David was imprisoned in 1967 by Red Guards during the Cultural Revolution, and was freed in 1973. His autobiography (see link below) describes his gradual (and qualified) recognition after emerging from prison of the faults of Mao Zedong and of the shortcomings of Marxism. Ironically, reading George Orwell, on whom he had spied in Spain in the 1930s, was especially convincing. In 1989, the Crooks criticized the suppression of the Tiananmen Square protests. Crook remarks in his autobiography, written shortly after, that 1989 marked the "end of my decades of adulation. I had thought that People's China was humanity's guide to a better world. I still acknowledge her past achievements. But her record has been tragically tarnished."
He was survived by his wife, teacher and social activist Isabel, and their three sons Carl, Michael and Paul.
Bibliography
- Li Zhengling 李正凌 et al. (eds.). Kēlǔkè fūfù zài Zhōngguó 柯鲁克夫妇在中国 : David and Isabel Crook in China. Wàiyǔ jiàoxué yǔ yánjiū chūbǎnshè 外语教学与研究出版社, ²2010, ISBN 978-7-5600-0963-6. In Chinese and English, with articles by Israel Epstein, Sidney Shapiro etc.
External links
- Hampstead Heath to Tian An Men - The autobiography of David Crook
- Brief chronology of David Crook's Life and An Obituary in The Guardian
Categories:- 1910 births
- 2000 deaths
- People from London
- British expatriates in China
- English communists
- British people of the Spanish Civil War
- British spies for the Soviet Union
- Double agents
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