Or Hsieh
Or Hsieh | |
---|---|
Member of the Legislative Yuan | |
In office 1948–1949 | |
Constituency | Taiwan |
Personal details | |
Born | January 1918 Báng-kah, Taiwan |
Died | 1955 |
Or Hsieh[1] or Hsieh Er (Chinese: 謝娥; January 1918 – 1995) was a Taiwanese physician, educator and politician. The first female surgeon from Taiwan, she was also one of the first group of women elected to the Legislative Yuan in 1948.
Biography
[edit]Hsieh was born in 1918 in Báng-kah, the second of four children of Hsieh Quan, who owned a restaurant. She attended Laosong Public School and Taihoku Prefectural Taihoku Third Girls' High School.[2] She graduated in April 1935 as the third-best student in her class, after which she attended Tokyo Women's Medical College, graduating with honours in April 1940. She subsequently became the first Taiwanese woman to work as a surgeon, joining St. Luke's International Hospital in Tokyo.[2][3] She returned to Taiwan in 1943, becoming an assistant professor in the medical department of the Taipei Imperial University.
While working at the university, Hsieh began reading the works of Lu Xun, Ba Jin and Lao She.[2] She began discussing anti-Japanese action with a group of five others in a temple in Xizhi.[2] However, they were arrested in 1944 and Hsieh was imprisoned and tortured. She was given the option of release as long as she co-operated with the Japanese authorities, but refused. She remained in prison until the end of World War II.[2] After her release in September 1945, she opened the a surgical hospital in Taiping in November, providing free treatment for the poor.[2]
In 1945 she joined the Kuomintang and set up the Taipei Women's Association.[2] In March 1946 she was elected to Taipei City Council, becoming its only female member.[2] She was a member of Taipei City Party Affairs Planning Committee between August and October 1946. She was a representative of Taiwan at the 1946 Constituent Assembly that drew up the Constitution of the Republic of China.[4] Her surgical practice was destroyed following the February 28 incident after she made a radio broadcast downplaying the violence.[5]
Hsieh contested the 1948 elections to the Legislative Yuan,[2] becoming one of the first group of women elected to the Chinese legislature. However, the following year she left Taiwan, initially for Europe, before settling in the United States.[2] She received a doctorate in public medicine from Columbia University, subsequently working at Oregon State Hospital and the New York State Department of Health, where she was deputy director.[5]
She returned to Taiwan in 1991 and died in 1995.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ "78. Dr. Or Hsieh 謝娥醫師". 6 September 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Chiu-Min Lin (2011) The Rise and the Retreat of Hsieh Er on the Political Stage of Taiwan (1946-1949)
- ^ 臺灣政壇第一位女將─謝娥(1918-1995 National Museum of Taiwan History
- ^ 制憲國民大會與臺灣代表團 Archived 2020-02-23 at the Wayback Machine Taiwan Historica
- ^ a b c 續修臺北市志 人物志政治與經濟篇
- 1918 births
- Women surgeons
- Taiwanese women physicians
- 20th-century Taiwanese educators
- Kuomintang Members of the Legislative Yuan in Taiwan
- 20th-century Chinese women politicians
- Members of the 1st Legislative Yuan
- Members of the 1st Legislative Yuan in Taiwan
- Columbia University alumni
- Taiwanese expatriates in the United States
- 1995 deaths
- 20th-century Taiwanese physicians
- Taiwanese surgeons
- Taipei City Councilors
- Scientists from Taipei
- Academic staff of the National Taiwan University
- Taiwanese prisoners and detainees
- World War II prisoners of war held by Japan