Sidney Rittenberg
Guest article by Larry Kessler, UNC professor of Chinese history,
written in July 2012
Biographical summary
Sidney
Rittenberg was born in 1921 into a prominent Jewish family of Charleston, South
Carolina. His father was president of
the city council, and there is a boulevard in Charleston named after his
grandfather, Sam Rittenberg, a local businessman and long-serving state
legislator who was a driving force behind enactment of state laws to improve
public school education and human rights. Sidney had received scholarships from
Princeton and Virginia, but he decided to attend UNC because of its liberal
reputation under Frank Porter Graham, who knew his family and took Sidney under
his wing. Sidney later called the university, which he attended from 1937 to 1940
majoring in philosophy, his “spiritual birthplace.” He dropped out of school
before completing the requirements for a Bachelor of Arts degree. Sidney once
stated that ironically it was also because of Dr. Frank that he left after his
junior year. Rittenberg had become heavily involved in the peace movement and
labor organizing, and had joined the campus affiliate
of the American Communist Party. As he began to neglect his academic work, Dr.
Frank Porter Graham (president of UNC at the time) called Sidney into his
office and suggested that he drop out of school and pursue his radical
activities, which he did. But after Pearl Harbor and the American entrance into
World War II, Sidney was drafted into the U.S. military in 1942, after first
being rejected for poor eyesight when he tried to volunteer right after Pearl
Harbor. Before joining the army, he gave up his Communist Party membership so
as not to jeopardize his position. He was sent to study at the army's Chinese
language training school in Monterey, and also took courses at Stanford
University.
He
was sent out to China as an interpreter in 1945 just as the war was ending. When
time came for his honorable discharge from the army, he decided to stay in
China and was able to get a job with the United Nations Relief and
Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) upon the recommendation of Madame Sun Yat-sen. Through his work with UNRRA, he came into contact
with the Chinese Communists, whom he saw as working for the same ideals as he
held. In 1946, he left UNRRA to go to Yan’an, where
the Communists were headquartered, and met Mao Zedong, Zhou Enlai, and all the
top members of the Party. In 1947, he was accepted as a member of the Chinese
Communist Party, only one of two Americans ever to be given that privilege.
(The other was George Hatem, also a graduate of UNC in 1930, and his story is
equally amazing.) For their part, the Communists were interested in his
English-language skills for what they imagined would be an American-dominated
postwar China. He was given a job polishing up the English language broadcasts
of Radio Yan’an and news releases of New China News
Agency.
But
in January 1949, on the eve of the Communist triumphant entry into Beijing and
declaration of the birth of the People’s Republic of China, Rittenberg was
arrested and charged with being part of an American spy ring led by the leftist
writer Anna Louise Strong sent to sabotage the Chinese revolution. For the next
6 years, he was kept in solitary confinement in a Beijing prison, finally being
exonerated and released in the spring of 1955. Amazingly, Sidney still was
committed to the Chinese Communist cause and decided to stay in the China. He
was given a job in the government’s Broadcast Administration, responsible for
the English language broadcasts of Radio Beijing. Sidney married Wang Yulin, a co-worker, and raised four children in China. He
rose in the ranks of the Communist Party, had access to classified information
and all the top leaders, and was a leading participant in the key political
movements of the time despite being a foreigner. But during the Cultural
Revolution in the 1960s, he ended up on the wrong side of the factional
struggles, and served another term in prison (1968-1977), again in solitary
confinement. Altogether, of his 35 years in China, Sidney spent nearly half
that time, 16 years, in prison. He has publicly stated that it was his fond
memories of Dr. Frank and Chapel Hill that helped him endure those years.
Sidney recalled these China experiences in his engaging autobiography, The Man Who Stayed Behind (Simon and
Schuster, 1993). He emerged from these experiences not at all embittered, and
at the end of the 1970s he was back in the good graces of the Chinese
leadership (at the time Deng Xiaoping), but he had to formally resign from the
Communist Party. Rittenberg worked for a few years for the New China News
Agency before finally leaving China in 1980.
Sidney
and his wife returned to the United States, with their four children joining
them later, and eventually they settled in the Seattle area. In 1989, Sidney
and Yulin began a consulting firm, Rittenberg
Associates Inc., which has counted among its clients such American firms
wanting to do business in China as Microsoft, Hughes Aircraft, Levi Strauss,
Polaroid, Intel, and McCaw Cellular. He regularly travels to China on brief business
trips and to maintain contact with his many acquaintances there. Since 1997,
Sidney has been Visiting Professor of Chinese Studies and Senior Adviser at
Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma. Sidney has extraordinary command of
spoken Chinese and is a fluent translator, skills he honed while working for
the New China News Agency and Radio Beijing.
Rittenberg’s renewed association
with UNC
Rittenberg
first trip back to the United States came in 1979, on a four-month visit to see
family and friends and to give talks on China. In June of that year he came
back to UNC for the first time in forty years, at the invitation of Larry
Kessler, a China historian and Director of International Programs at the time. Sidney
gave a major address on U.S.-China relations to a large audience in Hamilton Hall, and met with Asian specialists on campus. It
was on that occasion that Sidney inquired into the possibility of receiving
transfer credit for his work at Stanford University in the early 1940s, so that
he could finally earn his UNC degree. Associate Dean Frederick Vogler and
Professor Kessler investigated his record at Stanford, and it was clear that he
had more than enough credits to qualify. When Dean Vogler notified Sidney that
he was now a UNC graduate, he wrote in reply, "it was difficult to
articulate my pride and joy at your letter, and the feeling it gave me that my
long, deep love for our school has been requited. . . .
How I wish Dr. Frank could know and see this all taking place."
It was also during the 1979 visit to UNC that
Rittenberg expressed a desire to become a visiting lecturer at UNC. There was
some interest on the part of the College and the School of Journalism, but
Sidney got involved in other projects and the matter was dropped. He
maintained, however, a regular association with the university through
participation in Alumni Association and Program in the Humanities seminars on
China. Finally, in 1993 he was appointed the Frey Foundation Distinguished
Visiting Professor, on the recommendation of Professor Michael Hunt and the
History Department. The Rittenbergs established a temporary
second home in Chapel Hill when he began teaching at UNC in the spring of 1994.
From 1995 to 1998, he held the position of the Edward M. Bernstein Professor of
History. Each year, usually in the spring semester, Rittenberg taught two
courses in History and Asian Studies. Sidney was overjoyed to be teaching at
UNC. He said to one interviewer, “I really feel a very deep love for Chapel
Hill, and so being able to come and teach here is another dream that came
true.”
Sidney
was a very effective communicator with students, alumni, and the general
public. Students in his undergraduate courses were very enthusiastic about him
as a teacher. He would enthrall them with stories of helping Mao Zedong with
his English or playing bridge with Deng Xiaoping. History came alive in his
conversations. Participants in the many Program in the Humanities seminars he
led also give him very high marks for his ability to convey his experiences and
his knowledge of China with great clarity and charm. He also worked with the
Alumni Association in organizing and conducting tours to China. Sidney's
presence on campus during those five years enhanced our Asian Studies program,
enriched the Program in the Humanities seminars, won many friends for the College
and the university, and in general raised the visibility of a country that
Americans need to know more about.
Kessler’s
Addendum (August 31, 2019): Sidney died August 24, 2019 at the age of 98.
Addendum
#2 (July 12, 2021): Larry Kessler died on August 10, 2020 at the age of
84. His obituary is here.
David
Martin
July 12,
2021
Home Page Columns Column 5 Archive Contact