Yu Jiaju

Yu Jiaju (Chinese: 余家菊; pinyin: Yú Jiājú; Wade–Giles: Yü Chia-chü; 1898-1976) was a Chinese educator and social advocate.

Yu Jiaju

Biography

Yu was born to a scholarly family in Huangpi County, Hubei, Republic of China. He studied education at Beijing Normal University, and was later funded by the Chinese Ministry of Education to study in the UK, first in the University of London before transferring to the University of Edinburgh. He returned to China in 1924 to serve as head of the Department of Education at Wuchang University. In 1937, he became the head of the Department of Education at Henan University.[1]

Yu was a member of the Young China Association and was instrumental in the 1920s Educational Rights Movement. He particularly attacked Christian educational institutions as impinging on Chinese nationalism.[2][3]

After 1949, Yu moved to Taiwan and died there on May 12, 1976.[1]

gollark: <@!410159621651562508> Drake's Equation is basically just for roughly guessing about the commonness of intelligent life. <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drake_equation>"average number of planets that can potentially support life per star that has planets" is a *variable* in it.
gollark: Oh, you got an answer in the other channel.
gollark: I don't think anything would work for everything from radio to gamma rays.
gollark: Destroying half the *ecosystems*, maybe.
gollark: https://qntm.org/destroy

References

  1. Wang Zhencun; Liu Jiliang (29 March 2012). "Yu Jiaju". news.dahe.cn (in Chinese). Henan Daily. Retrieved 29 October 2018.
  2. Lutz, Jessie G. (July 1976). "Chinese Nationalism and the Anti-Christian Campaigns of the 1920s". Modern Asian Studies. 10 (03): 395–416. doi:10.1017/S0026749X00013044.
  3. Chu, Sin-Jan (1995). Wu Leichuan: a Confucian-Christian in republican China. New York: Peter Lang. p. 73. ISBN 9780820425313.


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