AuthorsDen.com  Join (free) | Login 

 
 Visited by 1,400,000+ people monthly.
 Popular! Books, Stories, Articles, Poetry
Where Authors and Readers come together!
Signed Bookstore - Enjoy!

Signed Bookstore | Authors | Books | Stories | Articles | Poetry | Blogs | News | Events | Reviews | Videos | Success | Gold Members | Testimonials

Featured Authors: Shawn Cormier, iBrainard Braimah, iDenise Richardson, iRobert Davis, iLawrence Danks, iHannah Curtis, i* Starman * *, i
  Home > Essays > Articles
Popular: Books, Stories, Articles, Poetry     
Lucille Bellucci
• Become a Fan
• 31 titles
• 48 Reviews
• Share with a Friend
• Save to My Library
• Add to My Favorites
• 
Member Since: Mar, 2001

   Sitemap
   My Blog
   Success Story
   Contact Author
   Message Board
   Read Reviews

Newsletter
Subscribe to the Lucille Bellucci Newsletter. Enter your name and email below and click "sign me up!"
Name:
Email:


Books
• Pastiche:Stories and Such

• Stone of Heaven

• A Rare Passion

• Journey from Shanghai

• The Year of the Rat

• The Snake Woman of Ipanema


Short Stories
• Flying Down to Rio

• The Country Squire

• Signora Petronio

• Retribution

• The Czarina's Man

• Night Calls

• The Crab Season

• Ch.5, Pt. 2, Journey from Shanghai

• Winters of the Heart

• The Carioca Dobie Derby


Articles
• Letter to Bill Maher

• See Naples And....

• Ezines that Pay

• More Than Half a Life

• Permanence is a Language

• The Circle of Rage

• Favors and Other Crimes


Poetry
• The Deed

• California Summer

• Obi

• Ballad of Yeen Wang

• LULLABY

         More poetry...
News
• Christmas poetry slam

• Pastiche: Stories and Such

• Jack London Award

• The Snake Woman of Ipanema

• Stone of Heaven"

• More Than Half a Life

• A Single Woman" wins!

Lucille Bellucci, click here to update your web pages on AuthorsDen.



Recent articles by Lucille Bellucci
• Letter to Bill Maher
• See Naples And....
• Ezines that Pay
• More Than Half a Life
• Permanence is a Language
• The Circle of Rage
• Favors and Other Crimes
           >> View all 8

Essays

Share    Print   Save  Become a Fan


Shanghai, Feb. 1952
By Lucille Bellucci
Last edited: Friday, December 19, 2008
Posted: Friday, December 19, 2008

Starting out into the world
Nonfiction—720 words Lucille Bellucci 6801 Wilton Drive Oakland, CA 94611-1706 SHANGHAI, CHINA February, 1952 After Father Malachy Murphy’s first year at St. Columban’s in Shanghai, my sister Maria and I began calling him The Murph behind his back. Malachy Murphy was a large, freckled redhead from County Mayo who told us his family was so big that whenever they had chicken for dinner, he only got the neck. He never did get a workable grip on the Shanghai dialect or any other Chinese language, but it was his gutsy laugh I remember more than his poor Chinese. My family had its roots in myriad places. My father was Italian-Dutch-Indonesian, my mother was Chinese, with bound feet. Foreign adventurers, businessmen, diplomatic envoys, an array of criminal entrepreneurial types of various nationalities, and a large Russian émigré population made Shanghai a booming enclave that became known in the 30s as The Pearl of the Orient. Anything was possible there, everything was available. My father was a businessman, his father a diplomatic envoy who came from Italy in the 1800s My mother danced, on her little feet, in the famous Palace Hotel ballroom. Life was good for most people. Being the youngest, I don’t recall the good times myself, but in May of 1949, when the Communists came to power in China, the situation for Chinese and foreigners alike became desperate. Arrests by night were common. Increasingly, they began to occur on the streets of Shanghai by day. Chinese parishioners of St. Columban’s entrusted The Murph wih their valuables before they vanished. They gave him the names and addresses of family members in other countries. He soon had difficulty storing all the antique vases and jewels he was given. He began to worry about transporting the objects when he, himself, left China. He confided to my father that he was going to “have to carry out more worldly goods than I brought into China.” In February 1952, while applying for exit visas, Maria and I were detained at the police station. I feared that we, too, would disappear as our friends and neighbors had. My family’s sole means of protection lay in our Italian citizenship. Although my mother was Chinese, she had an Italian passport, which the police considered a joke. That February day began six weeks of daily interrogation from seven in the morning until six in the evening. The questions were leveled as accusations: What did you do for the United States government? Who were your collaborators? It did not matter that the questions were laughable. Both sides understood they were merely a way of discrediting our family before our possessions could be confiscated. And always, the threat of execution hovered over our heads, Italian nationals or not. For mysterious reasons, Maria was dismissed after the first few days. Perhaps they thought that I, a teenager, would be easier to break. Break in what way? I don’t know; I had nothing to tell them. Each day when I was dismissed, I would go to St. Columban’s where The Murph gave me tea, and an assembly of parishioners listened as I recounted to them the questions I was asked. When I said that Maria and I had been threatened with execution, he said stoutly, “They haven’t shot any foreign citizens that I know of, so far.” When The Murph, himself, was interrogated he showed marvelous ingenuity in refusing to take along an interpreter – a move all of us considered brilliant. The chief interrogator eventually sent for an interpreter, who became as baffled as the interrogator. “The man was inspired,” The Murph told us. “He gave the chief a lovely story about me buying and selling meat and vegetables and playing golf while walking my dogs.” My family left China before The Murph did. The prospect of the huge outside world after being confined in our own neighborhood for years was frightening. We had no money but the few dollars the Communists allowed us to take, my father’s health was precarious and, of course, there was no hope of my finishing school. The Murph understood our apprehension. In saying farewell, he had Maria and me bow our heads while he blessed us. In typical Murph style, he said, “You’re not to worry. You will muddle through.” And we did. ###
Web Site Lucille Bellucci, Writer
f

Reader Reviews for "Shanghai, Feb. 1952"


Want to review or comment on this article?
Click here to login!


Need a FREE Reader Membership?
Click here for your Membership!


Reviewed by Linda Law 12/19/2008
Lucille.... I wish you would write more often... I read this story and could envision what you and your sister went thru...altho obviously not the fear or uncertainties... Your description of your mother and father and Murph are so visual... Thank you for writing this story...I want so much to better understand these cultural situations that I would never know about... hugs and peace sweet Lucille... lindalaw


Popular
Essays Articles
  1. The Argument Against Gay Marriages
  2. Being Happy
  3. Manny Pacquiao: Hero of an Island Nation
  4. John Milton and Paradise Lost
  5. The Battle Against Racism In Jena: Jena-Ci
  6. Essay: Early Christmas
  7. LaSalle High School Rebuilt
  8. Gaining Success in the Workplace
  9. The Gardening of Our Lives
  10. THE LAST WINTER





You can also search authors by alphabetical listing: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


Bookmark this page to your Favorites

Featured Authors
| New to AuthorsDen? | Add AuthorsDen to your Site
Share AD with your friends | Need Help? | About us


Problem with this page?   Report it to AuthorsDen

© AuthorsDen, Inc. All rights reserved.