Fireproof Moth is a mystery worthy of fiction. That the memoir is true makes it hard to put down or to forget. When convinced that the secret police were going to arrange an “accident” to kill his friend, the missionary decided he had no choice but to help well known human rights leader Peng Ming-min escape from Taiwan. So successful was the getaway that when President Richard Nixon and Chinese Premier Chou En-lai met in Beijing two years later and wanted to know how Peng got out, neither of their vast intelligence systems could tell them. Even Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, who presided over Taiwan’s Stalinist-style police state, went to his grave without knowing that a group of non-government novices managed to get Peng out undetected.
Milo Thornberry believed God called him to be a missionary to teach history and live the faith he professed. Taiwan wasn’t his choice, but it was where the Methodist Church sent him at the end of 1965. "Fireproof Moth: A Missionary in Taiwan’s White Terror" is a 65,000-word account of how becoming friends with Peng led to a double life, one in which Milo taught church history at Presbyterian seminaries, and the other in which he and his wife secretly collaborated with Peng and two of his former students in a variety of human rights activities, all of which were illegal and some of which were considered capital crimes under martial law. The constant threat of discovery by Chiang’s secret police gave Milo his own taste of the White Terror. When police showed up at their door on March 3, 1971, Milo and his wife became the first missionaries arrested since the Nationalists took over the island in 1945. Although the Kuomintang leaked a panoply of charges to explain the arrest and deportation, Peng’s escape and the Thornberry’s other activities were not among them. Instead, officials in Taiwan reported them as terrorists. The line in Beijing was that they were CIA agents.
Although Thornberry did not suffer torture and imprisonment like Wei Ting-chao and Hsieh Tsung-min, nor Peng’s twenty-year exile from his homeland, Milo was blacklisted by the U.S. State Department and denied a passport for nineteen years. Not allowed to resume his vocation as a missionary outside the United States, he completed his doctorate at Boston University, trained missionaries, and served as a pastor in Alaska and Oregon. His role in Peng’s escape was not revealed until 2003 when Milo was invited back to the newly democratic Taiwan to be recognized for his human rights activities. Only in 2009 did he and Peng uncover the true reason for Milo’s arrest thirty-eight years earlier. As a personal story, Milo’s conflicts of conscience between ideals of justice, breaking the law, and being a guest in the country were not theoretical questions, but the daily cauldron in which he made his fateful decisions. As a political narrative, the author’s portrayal of life in the White Terror casts an eerie shadow on contemporary relations between the United States, China, and Taiwan.
REVIEW:
Fireproof Moth is an autobiographical account of a Methodist missionary’s stay in Taiwan in the late 1960s, but it reads like a thriller. Thornberry first describes his personal journey to becoming a minister in the mid 1950s and the pursuit of spirituality that led him into life as a missionary. In 1965, the Methodist Church decided to send Thornberry and his wife Judith to Taiwan, and the couple went through preparatory sessions at Drew University and Stony Point Missionary Orientation Center north of New York. During this time, he did read some critical works such as George Kerr’s Formosa Betrayed and Mark Mancall’s Formosa Today, which had just been published at the time. Upon arrival in Taipei on New Year’s Eve 1966, they settled down, started language school, and gradually came to experience the suffocating hold which the Kuomintang regime of Chiang Kai-shek had on society in Taiwan. They also got to know Prof. Peng Ming-min, who was under house arrest at the time for publishing a document titled “A Manifesto for Self-Salvation” in 1964. Gradually, they became more immersed in life in Taiwan, continued language training, and learned about the lack of political freedoms and human rights on the island. They also started to help channel support from overseas to families of political prisoners, with the help of Peng’s two courageous students, Hsieh Tsung-ming and Wei Ting-chao. They also started to produce mimeographed information sheets to inform visiting friends and colleagues overseas about the repressive political atmosphere in the island. Together with other foreign friends in Taiwan they approached American and European reporters, gave them background information on developments in Taiwan, which would then be published in the news media. Fox Butterfield and the New York Times and Selig Harrison of the Washington Post were among them. When in September 1968 Professor Peng Ming-min told them that he had received indications from the Investigation Bureau of the Ministry of Justice, one of the main secret police organizations at the time, that Peng might have an “accident”, a plan was devised to smuggle Peng out of Taiwan. After more than a year of preparation, the plan became a reality, and on 3 January 1970, Peng left Taiwan on a doctored Japanese passport, disguised as a Japanese musician. He safely made it to Sweden, where he received political asylum. Eventually, Peng made it to the United States, where he became a senior research scholar and visiting professor at the University of Michigan. Oddly, the Kuomintang authorities never discovered the role played by Thornberry and his wife in Peng’s escape. They surmised that he had been helped by the CIA. The matter even came up in the February 1972 discussions between Kissinger and Nixon with Chinese Premier Chou Enlai. Chou accused the Americans of aiding Professor Peng in his escape, but Nixon responded with “We had nothing to do with it.” However, Taiwan’s secret police agencies kept an ever-tightening watch over Milo and Judith, and on 2 March 1971 – more than a year after Peng’s escape – they were arrested and expelled from Taiwan. A witness who came to their home after they had been put under house arrest was Selig Harrison, who wrote a front-page article about it in the Washington Post (“Taiwan expels US missionary”, 4 March 1971). It wasn’t until December 2003, at a reunion of human rights and democracy activists organized by the Taiwan Foundation for Democracy, that Milo and Judith – as well as the Japanese counterparts who also played a crucial role—disclosed their involvement in Peng’s escape. The book reads like a spy thriller and fills a key void in the written history of Taiwan’s very recent transition to democracy. Highly recommended.—Gerrit van der Wees, George Mason University. Published in Taiwan Communique no. 132, May/June 2011.
Page Count: 196
Trim Size: 5.5 x 8.5
Publish Date: February 10, 2011
Imprint: Sunbury Press
Genre: History
You might also like ...
-
Richard Penn's Manor of Andolhea$9.99Unlock the hidden history of Richard Penn's Man...Unlock the hidden history of Richard Penn's Manor of Andolhea, an 18th-century Pennsylvania settlement where German pioneers braved the French and Indian War along the Tulpehocken Path to build a l...
-
The AI Tsunami: A Survival Guide for Humanity$19.95Look up. A tsunami is coming. Artificial intell...Look up. A tsunami is coming. Artificial intelligence is not a ripple—it’s a tidal wave.Powerful. Disruptive. Transformational.It will reshape nations, cultures, careers, and daily life—and most pe...
-
Guide to the Quehanna Trail$14.95Master the wild beauty of Pennsylvania’s most r...Master the wild beauty of Pennsylvania’s most remote landscapes with this definitive, point-by-point guide to the 73-mile Quehanna Trail loop. Definitive Navigational Authority: This comprehensiv...
-
Redwood Summer - How Mendocino Went to Pot$19.95A tumultuous chronicle of Mendocino County’s in...A tumultuous chronicle of Mendocino County’s industrial rise and fall, this narrative explores the human and economic costs of squandered natural resources and the clash of cultures that transforme...
-
There's More to Hippos Than You Know$12.95~ 25 Poems about Real Animals with Hundreds of ...~ 25 Poems about Real Animals with Hundreds of Fun Facts ~ How do we see the animals we love (and some we may not) through human eyes? Poetry, scientific knowledge, and the vision of artists. There...
-
Secret Weapons$89.95~ The Untold History, Forms, and Use of Sword-...~ The Untold History, Forms, and Use of Sword-Canes and Swordsticks ~ This is the first book ever written on the subject of Swordsticks. Yes, really. While numerous books have been written on the...
-
Trade Up$19.95- Why the Future Belongs to Skilled Trades and...- Why the Future Belongs to Skilled Trades and How Career Education is Transforming the Workforce - The four-year college degree has been the preferred path for generations of Americans who saw i...
-
Will Rogers Storyteller$19.95~ American Humor from the Beginnings to the Okl...~ American Humor from the Beginnings to the Oklahoma Cowboy ~ Will Rogers is one of the most unifying figures in American and World history. His ever-widening magical lasso encircled the globe and...
-
Pictorial History of the Schwaben Creek Valley$19.95Steve Troutman further expands upon the history...Steve Troutman further expands upon the history of Pennsylvania’s bucolic Schwaben Creek Valley, delving into the stories of the original inhabitants and the initial settlers, including the various...
-
Electric Bluesman$27.95- The Life and Times of Jimi Hendrix - Stormin...- The Life and Times of Jimi Hendrix - Storming London as a black guitarist in a world of white musicians, Jimi Hendrix reclaimed rock and roll as true American music. His first guitar was an ol...
-
Two Emancipations, One More To Go$14.95- Releasing the Black Mind From the Shackles ...- Releasing the Black Mind From the Shackles of Oppression - It is time for black Americans to rise and take control of their destiny. Black Americans are not without resources. They are 48-50 ...
-
A Week in the Blue Mountains$19.95- The Record of a Happy Outing - From June 14...- The Record of a Happy Outing - From June 14 to June 22, 1914, Henry Wharton Shoemaker and his wife, Mabelle Ruth Ord Shoemaker, traversed the Blue Mountain by carriage and on horseback, startin...
-
Pennsylvania Mountain Landmarks Volume 2 (ePub)$9.99This second volume in the Pennsylvania Mountain...This second volume in the Pennsylvania Mountain Landmarks series includes more accounts of the author’s explorations of little-traveled byways and cloud-capped hilltops in the mountains of Pennsylv...
-
Erotic Hustle (ePub)$4.99Redefining Sin through Sacred Sexuality & P...Redefining Sin through Sacred Sexuality & Psychedelics Lana Shay reveals secrets of the sex industry and of Gentlemen’s clubs across America in this rousing memoir. Lana Shay, a Tantrika, or...
-
Pennsylvania Mountain Landmarks Volume 1 (ePub)$9.99This volume, and subsequent volumes, include ac...This volume, and subsequent volumes, include accounts of the author’s explorations of little-traveled byways and remote hilltops in the mountains of Pennsylvania. His descriptions and photos of th...
-
The Pennsylvania Dutch (epub)$9.99Fredric Klees' The Pennsylvania Dutch is the be...Fredric Klees' The Pennsylvania Dutch is the best and most inclusive volume with an over-all approach to its subject. "I have tried," he says, "to make this book a comprehensive treatment of the Pe...
-
Pirates of Key West$19.95- High Times on the High Seas in the Roaring 1...- High Times on the High Seas in the Roaring 1980s - Pirates of Key West is the true story of author Kelly Ryan Harriger, who found himself pulled into the seductive, illicit, and exhilarating w...
-
The Tyrant and the Teen$26.70- In 1968 an Australian teenager narrowly escap...- In 1968 an Australian teenager narrowly escaped the clutches of Philippines dictator Ferdinand Marcos. She lived to tell the tale ... for those who didn’t. - A 17-year-old Australian girl—confi...
-
Lattimer Massacre$11.95On September 10, 1897, Luzerne County Sheriff J...On September 10, 1897, Luzerne County Sheriff James Martin and 150 armed deputies fired on approximately 400 unarmed immigrant coal miners marching peacefully to support a newly formed United Mine ...
-
Fight for the Quantum$16.95Fight for the Quantum: Essays on Spirituality a...Fight for the Quantum: Essays on Spirituality and Science is a provocative and playful exploration of the philosophical battleground where science and spirituality collide. Rather than offering def...
-
We Buried Dad in a Leisure Suit$24.95This is a story of two brothers and their rauco...This is a story of two brothers and their raucous retelling of their father’s life on the way to his funeral. There is alcoholism, abuse, exotic dancers, crime, tragedy, love, and persistence with ...
-
They Did Not Make It Back$24.95by Terry Bender Perry County's Civil War Dead W...by Terry Bender Perry County's Civil War Dead While leaders of governments call for war, the common man fights it. In 1861, Perry County, Pennsylvania, had a population of roughly twenty-three thou...
-
A Pennsylvania Bison Hunt$9.99Henry Shoemaker collected the details of the bi...Henry Shoemaker collected the details of the bison he believed were native to Pennsylvania in the early days, including his imagined Bison americanus Pennsylvanicus, a smaller wood bison that lived...
-
The Six-Lined Racerunner: A Memoir$19.95As the son of an Air Force Sergeant, Steve was ...As the son of an Air Force Sergeant, Steve was fortunate to spend four years at the Air Force base in Torrejon, just outside Madrid, not long before the generalissimo’s demise. The one constant sou...
-
Well and Eager for the Fray: Volume 2$24.95by John P Deeben Letters from Northumberland Co...by John P Deeben Letters from Northumberland County Soldiers to the Local Press during the Civil War, 1861–1865 In 1861, young men from Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, enthusiastically answere...
-
Well and Eager for the Fray: Volume 1$24.95by John P Deeben Letters from Northumberland Co...by John P Deeben Letters from Northumberland County Soldiers to the Local Press during the Civil War, 1861–1865 In 1861, young men from Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, enthusiastically answere...
-
Warriors of the Revolution$19.95Historians Claude Berube and Lawrence Knorr hav...Historians Claude Berube and Lawrence Knorr have selected 35 of the most important or impactful soldiers and sailors from the American Revolution, regardless of their level of fame. A biography of ...
-
Eclectic Entertaining : Small Plates and Dainty Desserts$25.00-- 101 carefully crafted recipes -- Cooking i...-- 101 carefully crafted recipes -- Cooking instructor Barbara Stafford has assembled her favorite collection of small plates and dessert recipes in this glossy, colorful and well-produced cookbo...
-
Eclectic Entertaining$25.00-- 15 complete dinner party menus for busy peo...-- 15 complete dinner party menus for busy people who like to cook -- Multi-Award Winning Cookbook. Step into Barbara’s kitchen, where every dinner party feels effortless, and every guest leaves ...
-
Reflections of the Susquehanna$19.95The Susquehanna River is a unique environment, ...The Susquehanna River is a unique environment, with many life lessons to be learned by simply observing its long, lazy flow from its source in New York to and including the Chesapeake Bay. All tha...
-
A Man Named Branch$9.99- The True Story of Baseball's Great Experimen...- The True Story of Baseball's Great Experiment - In 1947, filled with courage, skill, and determination, Jackie Robinson changed history by becoming the first African American player in the majo...
-
West Point at Gettysburg Volume 1 (A to G)$22.95— from James M. McPherson, Princeton University...— from James M. McPherson, Princeton University, author of Battle Cry of Freedom — "Paul Semendinger has produced a unique volume that is a combination reference work, collective biography, and nar...
-
Pennsylvania Mountain Landmarks Volume 5$16.95Just as in the previous volume (Pennsylvania Mo...Just as in the previous volume (Pennsylvania Mountain Landmarks, Volume 4) many of the landmarks in this volume have deep-rooted connections to Native American culture and lore. It is a link that ...
-
Over-55 Conniptions$19.95-An Old Biddy Battles Aging - What happens wh...-An Old Biddy Battles Aging - What happens when a free-wheeling seventy-four-year-old woman gives up her carefree RVing lifestyle and moves into an over-55 community? Follow Gerri Almand’s real-l...
-
Your House, Their Rules$22.95- Your Guide To Being Owned By A Cat - Your H...- Your Guide To Being Owned By A Cat - Your House, Their Rules is a comprehensive guide to cat care and related topics. With lighthearted satire, Christopher Mancuso bends his knee to cat royalty...
-
Stories at the Center$24.95A Memoir of Miles, Music, and Meaning - Chroni...A Memoir of Miles, Music, and Meaning - Chronicling Eric’s unconventional path in the entertainment business, Stories at the Center is set against the backdrop of his lifelong passion for distance...
-
Siblings in the Hands of an Angry God$24.95Brothers and Sisters through Mythology and the ...Brothers and Sisters through Mythology and the Dominance of Females in Human Morality Since the beginning, whether through the creation story of Adam and Eve or throughout mythology and actual hist...
-
Dark Forces - Prisoners of Wealth$24.95Situated in the tiny village of Sag Harbor on t...Situated in the tiny village of Sag Harbor on the Long Island Sound, Martin "Marty" Grimes and his colleague, Sal Persico, are retained by a Russian oligarch to protect his financial and reputation...
-
Dave McNally$22.95- The Montanan Who Revolutionized Baseball - W...- The Montanan Who Revolutionized Baseball - What lies ahead for a boy growing up in Billings, Montana, in the 1950s, who lost his father during combat in World War II? Can he realize the dream of...
-
Guide to the Pinchot Trail System$9.99The 22.2-mile Pinchot Trail is an orange-blazed...The 22.2-mile Pinchot Trail is an orange-blazed loop through Pinchot State Forest in southern Lackawanna County. The trail was formed from previously existing trails and a few new connectors in the...
-
Guide to the Thunder Swamp Trail$9.99The Thunder Swamp Trail (TST) is an 18.3-mile l...The Thunder Swamp Trail (TST) is an 18.3-mile loop in Delaware State Forest, in southern Pike County. The main loop is bisected by PA 402, and the official trailhead is at the trail’s southern cros...
-
Guide to the Old Loggers Path$9.99The Old Loggers Path (OLP) is a great walking p...The Old Loggers Path (OLP) is a great walking path for beginner and experienced hikers alike. The looped trail explored the Loyalsock State Forest, in Sullivan County, Pennsylvania, for 27.8 miles....
-
Pennsylvania Mountain Landmarks Volume 4$14.95As one ancient author once invited his readers ...As one ancient author once invited his readers to “gaze upon the mountains, for they brood upon things eternal,” readers of this volume are encouraged to do the same. That is, to gaze upon the clo...
-
Early Settlements Along the Lower Mahantongo Creek$24.95... and Mahantongo Valley Grist Mills Steve Tro...... and Mahantongo Valley Grist Mills Steve Troutman further expands upon the history of Pennsylvania’s bucolic Lower Mahantongo Creek Valley, delving into the stories of the original inhabitants a...
-
The Memory Keeper$14.95- Celebrating and Remembering Someone We Lost a...- Celebrating and Remembering Someone We Lost and Still Love - The Memory Keeper is a special space just for you, to remember someone you love who is no longer here. You can draw, color, paint, gl...
-
A Version of the Truth$12.95Over forty years, Marsh and her partner built a...Over forty years, Marsh and her partner built a life defined by love, devotion, and independence. He supported her when she bought her home in California wine country, when she grieved the deaths o...
-
Youth Sports Are Killing Me Slowly$14.95Navigating youth sports has become a full-time ...Navigating youth sports has become a full-time job for parents, driven by a mix of living vicariously through our children and chasing the dream of them reaching the “big stage.” But are we doing t...
-
Roaring Tigers 2nd Edition$34.95- The History Of Southern Columbia Football - ...- The History Of Southern Columbia Football - High school football has been played in Pennsylvania since the late 1800s. The rich tradition of Pennsylvania scholastic football has produced legenda...
-
Graves of Our Founders: Vol. 4: Their Lives, Contributions, and Burial Sites$24.95Their Lives, Contributions, and Burial Sites Jo...Their Lives, Contributions, and Burial Sites Joe Farrell, Joe Farley, and Lawrence Knorr have traveled across the eastern USA to the graves of over 200 founding fathers (and mothers) responsible fo...
Recently Viewed Products
Book Review
Fireproof Moth; Mission in Asia in Times of Turmoil
By Milo Thornberry, reviewed by Gerrit van der Wees
Published in Taiwan Communique no. 132, May/June 2011
Fireproof Moth is an autobiographical account of a Methodist missionary’s stay in Taiwan in the late 1960s, but it reads like a thriller. Thornberry first describes his personal journey to becoming a minister in the mid 1950s and the pursuit of spirituality that led him into life as a missionary.
In 1965, the Methodist Church decided to send Thornberry and his wife Judith to Taiwan, and the couple went through preparatory sessions at Drew University and Stony Point Missionary Orientation Center north of New York. During this time he did read some critical works such as George Kerr’s Formosa Betrayed and Mark Mancall’s Formosa Today, which had just been published at the time.
Upon arrival in Taipei on New Year’s Eve 1966 they settled down, started language school, and gradually came to experience the suffocating hold which the Kuomintang regime of Chiang Kai-shek had on society in Taiwan. They also got to know Prof. Peng Ming-min, who was under house arrest at the time for publishing a document titled “A Manifesto for Self-Salvation” in 1964.
Gradually they became more immersed in life in Taiwan, continued language training, and learned about the lack of political freedoms and human rights on the island. They also started to help channel support from overseas to families of political prisoners, with the help of Peng’s two courageous students, Hsieh Tsung-ming and Wei Ting-chao. They also started to produce mimeographed information sheets to inform visiting friends and colleagues overseas about the repressive political atmosphere in the island.
Together with other foreign friends in Taiwan they approached American and European reporters, gave them background information on developments in Taiwan, which would then be published in the news media. Fox Butterfield and the New York Times and Selig Harrison of the Washington Post were among them.
When in September 1968 Professor Peng Ming-min told them that he had received indications from the Investigation Bureau of the Ministry of Justice, one of the main secret police organizations at the time, that Peng might have an “accident”, a plan was devised to smuggle Peng out of Taiwan. After more than a year of preparation, the plan became a reality, and on 3 January 1970, Peng left Taiwan on a doctored Japanese passport, disguised as a Japanese musician. He safely made it to Sweden, where he received political asylum.
Eventually Peng made it to the United States, where he became a senior research scholar and visiting professor at the University of Michigan. Oddly, the Kuomintang authorities never discovered the role played by Thornberry and his wife in Peng’s escape. They surmised that he had been helped by the CIA. The matter even came up in the February 1972 discussions between Kissinger and Nixon with Chinese Premier Chou Enlai. Chou accused the Americans of aiding Professor Peng in his escape, but Nixon responded with indignation: “We had nothing to do with it.”
However, Taiwan’s secret police agencies kept an ever tightening watch over Milo and Judith, and on 2 March 1971 – more than a year after Peng’s escape – they were arrested and expelled from Taiwan. A witness who came to their home after they had been put under house arrest was Selig Harrison, who wrote a front page article about it in the Washington Post (“Taiwan expels US missionary”, 4 March 1971).
It wasn’t until December 2003, at a reunion of human rights and democracy activists organized by the Taiwan Foundation for Democracy, that Milo and Judith – as well as the Japanese counterparts who also played a crucial role — disclosed their involvement in Peng’s escape.
The book reads like a spy thriller and fills a key void in the written history of Taiwan’s very recent transition to democracy. Highly recommended.
The full title of the book is: Fireproof Moth; A Missionary in Taiwan’s White Terror”, by Rev. Milo L. Thornberry. Published by Sunbury Press, Lemoyne, Pennsylvania. February 2011.