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More Prophet Than Statesman
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18237 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
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10 / 1990 |
1,958 Words |
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Ernest W. Lefever Ernest W. Lefever is president of the Ethics and Public Policy
Center and the author of Nairobi to Vancouver: The World
Council of Churches and the World, 1975-87, just published by
the center. |
MISSIONARY FOR FREEDOM
The Life and Times of Walter Judd
Lee Edwards
New York: Paragon House, September 1990
306 pp., $21.95
In these days when antiheroes are celebrated by Hollywood, when the symbols of religion are desecrated by avant-garde “artists,” and when cynicism flourishes in high places, it is refreshing to reflect on the life of a genuine, religiously motivated hero free of cant and cynicism. Walter Judd is such a man - Christian missionary, principled politician, and passionate patriot. The inspiring portrait of this remarkable man who is not without flaws is now conveniently available in Lee Edwards' sympathetic portrait, Missionary for Freedom.
Born in Nebraska in 1898, Walter Judd worked his way through medical school, spent ten years as a Protestant missionary doctor in China in the turbulent 1930s, and twenty years as a U.S. congressman from Minnesota in the 1940s and 1950s. He is best known as a tireless anticommunist and an advocate of American support for Chiang Kai-shek and the Nationalist cause in China and Taiwan. But he was and is much more.
A man of enormous courage, Judd in 1937 stood firm and virtually alone as Japanese troops occupied the area where his mission hospital was located in China. He had earlier sent his wife and two daughters to safety in America. The brutal soldiers raped women of all ages, deliberately bombed civilian areas, and reintroduced opium to demoralize the
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