Did Ping Fu, a prominent Chinese-American businesswoman and author of a recent memoir, âBend, not Breakâ, make up her horrible experiences during the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution in order to gain United States citizenship Did they help her become an American by claiming political asylum
Thatâs what her critics, many of them fellow Chinese Americans, say. Itâs an accusation that can stick. As a recent New York Times investigation showed, claiming persecution has spawned an immigration industry involving lawyers prepping client to make false asylum claims.
As I write in my Letter from China this week, Ms. Fu is being accused of making up a lot of things in her memoir. Sheâs also a successful entrepreneur: the U.S. government honored the founder of the software company Geomagic (in the process of being sold to 3D Systems) with a â2012 Outstanding American by Choiceâ award.
Ms. Fu is on the board of the White Houseâs National Advisory Council on Innovation and Entrepreneurship, and is a member of the National Council on Women in Technology, according to the Web site of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.
Ms. Fu, who says in her memoir she was âquietly deportedâ to the U.S. in 1984 for writing about female infanticide while still a college student, denies the accusations. But until now she hadnât explained in public how she became an American.
In an interview with the International Herald Tribune, she said, apparently for the first time, the reason she kept quiet was she was trying to protect her first husband, an American, whom she does not mention in her memoir. The marriage took place while she was living in California! , she said.
âI had a first marriage and thatâs how I got my green card,â she said by telephone. She married on Sept. 1, 1986 and divorced three years later. Until now she had kept silent because of a âsmearâ campaign against her online, mostly by fellow Chinese who accuse her of lying, which extended to real-life harassment, she said: âThey smear my name, they try to get my daughterâs name on the Internet, they sent people to Shanghai to surround my family and to Nanjing to harass my neighbors.â She said the accusers, who are âangryâ for reasons she doesnât really understand, contacted U.S. immigration authorities to challenge her award and her citizenship, as well as shareholders of 3D Systems to warn them she was a âliar,â and not to buy Geomagic. Her second husband, Herbert Edelsbrunner, whom she has since divorced, received many âhate emails,â she said. âI just donât want to hurt innocent people.â
If a first, unpublicized marriage might lay to rest one conentious issue, there are others. Some were the result of exaggeration or unclear communication with her ghost-writer, Los Angeles-based MeiMei Fox, she said.
In the interview, she volunteered an example of an error: a widely criticized account of the ââperiod police,ââ the authorities who checked a womanâs menstrual cycle to ensure she wasnât pregnant in the early days of the one-child policy. To stop women substituting othersâ sanitary pads for inspection, they were sometimes required to use their own finger to show blood. Through a misunderstanding with Ms. Fox, Ms. Fu said this was portrayed as the use of other peopleâs fingers - an invasion of the womanâs body.
Ms. Fox âwrote it wrong,ââ she said. ââI corrected it three times but it didnât get corrected.ââ Women used their own finger to show blood, she said, but the mistake went into print anyway.
In general, Ms. Fox may have ââjust made some searches on the Internet that maybe werenât cor! rect,ââ! said Ms. Fu.
Chiefly the errors involved use of the words ââall, never, any,ââ that generalized unacceptably, Ms. Fu said. And, ââShe doesnât know Chinaâs geography,ââ said Ms. Fu.
At the beginning of her memoir, Ms. Fu writes of being kidnapped by a Vietnamese-American on arrival in the U.S. state of New Mexico and locked in his apartment to care for his very young children, whose mother had left, in a bizarre incident. A spokeswoman at the Albuquerque Police Departmentâs Records Office, where the alleged kidnapping took place, said she could not locate such an incident in their records. Asked about it, Ms. Fu repeated that she did not press charges as, fresh from China, she was terrified of all police, âSo I donât know how they keep records, if there is no criminal charges or record.â
And in an email to me, she admitted she made mistakes about a magazine she said she helped edit, called Wugou, or âNo Hook,â produced in 1979 by students at her college, ten called the Jiangsu Teacherâs College (later it changed its name to Suzhou University, she said.) It was not that magazine but another one, âThis Generation,â that was taken to a meeting in Beijing of student magazine writers from around the country, she wrote in the email. âA good case that shows everyoneâs memory can be wrong,â she wrote.
But bigger questions about the scale of the online vitriol from parts of the Chinese and Chinese-American community remain. âI really havenât known China for 20-something years, and it didnât occur to me that what I wrote would generate so much anger,â she said. In the last years, âas China got stronger, nationalistic views got stronger,â she said, making a âcivil conversationâ about disagreements apparently harder.
Additional reporting by Cindy Hao in Seattle