Wang Huiwu


Wang Huiwu was a social reformer, a Communist Party of China women's organizer, as well as a proponent of women's emancipation. She ran the first Communist-sponsored journal which was written and edited mostly by women. Her husband was Li Da one of the founders of CCP and a propagator of Marxist Philosophy.

Early life

Wang was born in Jiaxing County, Zhejiang, Qing China, to a school teacher and his illiterate wife. Her father, Wang Yanchen, provided her initial education. Her father's untimely death put the family in a penurious situation. However, she continued with her studies at the Jiaxing Women's Normal School and the Hujun Academy for Girls, managed by Christian Missionaries, where she learned English and became a Christian. At Hujun, she participated in student protests against the Paris Peace Conference. It was at Hujun while she became fluent in English that she imbibed the iconoclasm of the May Fourth Movement, which inspired her to spearhead the movement for women's emancipation.
After graduation, she moved to Shanghai where her cousin, Shen Yanbing, later known as Mao Dun, introduced Wang to Marxists. She married Li Da, a Marxist philosopher and feminist, who had returned from Japan after studies, in autumn of 1920; they shared an apartment with Chen Duxiu and his wife, Gao Junman. Wang and Li moved to Changsha where they had a son and daughter. After 1927, they lived in Shanghai and in Beijing, and in July 1937 during the Japanese invasion of northern China, they escaped and lived in Guilin and Guiyang, before eventually arriving in Chongqing, the war time capital. They later divorced.

Career

With Junman, Wang was the first woman activist in Shanghai's Communist organization. She and her husband who had a common interest in the women's emancipation and together published a number of articles on the subject during post-World War I period in popular periodicals. In 1921, she participated in the First Communist Party of the China National Congress, working as a guard. Wang established the Shanghai Commoners' Girls' School in 1922,. She was the editor of Women's Voice, a bimonthly periodical; which pioneered writings on politics by women. She also strongly supported the movement for birth control in spite of much male opposition.
In 1949, she moved to Beijing following establishment of the PRC and worked for the Legal Committee of the central government. She also participated in the 60th anniversary of the founding of CCP.

Publications

Wang's earliest publication on Women's emancipation was entitled "Chinese Woman Question: Liberation from a Trap" which was published in 1919 in the Young China; the theme of this book was on early traditional marriage custom all related to the dominant role of the husband in every aspect of his wife's life.
In 1949, when Wang went to Beijing, she published many essays reminiscing the founding of the CCP.

Family

Wang and her husband Li Da had three children. Their eldest daughter, Li Xintián, died of an illness during the Second Sino-Japanese War. The second daughter was Li Xinyi. Their only son was Li Xintian, a founder of medical psychology in China.

Death and legacy

In her final years, Wang was described as "frail and sickly", a result of years of hard labour. Wang died on 10 October 1993, at her residence in Beijing, aged 96. The cause of death was sickness coupled with old age. A memorial in honour of Wang's contribution to the cause of women in China was established at Wuzhen, a World Heritage town, in northern Zhejiang Province.