BEIJING, Sept. 21 -- In the twilight of Sept 21,
1909, Feng Ru (1883-1912) climbed into a self-propelled, fixed-wing plane he
personally designed and prepared for a test flight in the Piedmont hills
overlooking Oakland, California. It was six years after the Wright brothers took
to the skies, and aviation had just become a global infatuation.
Feng, a self-taught inventor originally from Enping,
Guangdong province, flew the plane and stayed aloft for 29 minutes before
plunging to the ground.
Following his success as the first person to fly over
North America's Pacific Coast, Feng, who is called the "Father of Chinese
Aviation", returned to China with his plane. He helped launch the country's
aviation industry, a lasting legacy that has grown ever stronger over the past
century.
This year marks the 100th anniversary of his historic
flight. At the location where Feng first took to the skies, a chance encounter
with Roger Glenn, an African-American jazz performer and private pilot, involved
Zhang Qing in the centennial commemoration.
Zhang, a correspondent in Oakland with Hangzhou-based
Qianjiang Evening News, was curious about the NASA jacket Glenn wore to their
friend's birthday party.
Conversation was then naturally steered toward
Glenn's early days of learning to fly in the Hawaii navy, his appreciation of
the Chinese aviation pioneer and the project he was working on to commemorate
the 100th anniversary of his flight.
"My central motivation for working on this project is
that people in this country don't know of him because he was from China at a
time when the achievements of minorities in this country were not usually
recognized," Glenn says.
"It is only recently that we are starting to realize
people from other countries and races have contributed to the advancement of
aviation here, as well as many other pursuits in life that go untold. We are
coming up to the 100th anniversary of his flight; that is too long to hold a
secret."
Zhang felt both ashamed and shocked that she didn't
know about Feng at that time.
A week later, Zhang joined Glenn and a few other
friends to retrace Feng's footsteps through Oakland. They visited the campus of
Laney College, where Feng used to have his workshops. They also stopped at local
libraries and Chinese communities. In the Oakland History Room of the Oakland
Public Library, they bumped into librarian Steven Lavoie, who helped them find
relevant books and verify and discredit details to discover an accurate account.
While working as a staff writer at a local newspaper
in the 1980s and 1990s, Lavoie learned about Feng in The Chinese of Oakland:
Unsung Builders by Eve Armentrout Ma and Jeong Huei Ma, which briefly mentions
his accomplishments. After he became a librarian, he helped other researchers
find newspaper coverage of Feng's flight and other experiments before he
returned to China.
Lavoie said local newspapers hailed Feng's 1909
journey as the first successful flight over the Pacific Coast, a claim that was
later co-opted by other aviation pioneers.
Feng's accomplishments were to a great extent
dismissed by the aviation community of his era, largely due to his ethnic
origin.
Lavoie undertook meticulous research in university
libraries in Orange county, Los Angeles, and Berkeley to determine whether
claims made by others who shared the claim were true.
In the end, he was fairly convinced the honor
belonged to Feng and has organized a seminar held in the Oakland Public Library
on Thursday, in recognition of Feng and his legacy.
Glenn worked as the organizer of commemorative
events, while Lavoie gave talks on his research confirming the historic
importance of Feng's flight, along with live interactive video casts of scholars
in China and Canada.
Glenn had also been busy preparing for the
groundbreaking ceremony of a monument commemorating Feng on Saturday at Laney
College. A bronze bust of Feng, designed by sculptor Long Xiang and donated by
Qianjiang Evening News, constituted the headstone of the monument.
Publishers of Qianjiang Evening News attended the
ceremony along with Thomas C. Reed, former Secretary of the Air Force; Cindi
Edwards, the great grandniece of the Wright brothers; members of the Amelia
Earhart Composite Squadron of the Civil Air Patrol; and other special guests.
President of Laney College, Frank Chong, used the
event to encourage Laney students to confidently pursue their dreams.
"We hope that this monument will be a symbol to all
people that there is creativity in all of us and that when these advancements
are achieved and honored it will inspire others to venture forth, and follow
their dreams," Chong says.
Glenn doesn't want this project to be simply building
a monument to honor one person. He wants it to be the beginning of successive
annual events to honor those forgotten people of accomplishment who have fallen
through the cracks because they didn't belong to mainstream society. "I do this
not for myself but for all of humanity to know that we are all equal and deserve
to be recognized for things we can do," he says.
In China, a series of commemorative events are to be
held today in Feng's hometown, Enping in Guangdong province.
His childhood home is a museum; the middle school,
the public square and several science prizes are named in his honor; and his
last words - "your faith in the progress of your cause is by no means to be
affected by my death" - still resonate in the hearts of Chinese people.
Qianjiang Evening News contributed to the story
(Source: China Daily)