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Pearl and Bessie

A Baby Abandoned on a Rubbish Dump, and the Woman Who Saved Her

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Pearl and Bessie

By: Julia Bishop, Andy Bull
Narrated by: Elena Curti
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About this listen

Pearl and Bessie
A baby abandoned on a rubbish dump, and the woman who saved her


On the rubbish dump, a baby cried.

The cry was weak, and fading. The wild dogs had picked up the cries, and the scent, and were circling, closing in.

Bessie walked towards the sound and found a day-old baby girl. She had been abandoned because of her sex. It happened often here, in south west China.

If Bessie did nothing, the baby would be torn to pieces. So she picked her up, carried her to safety, and later adopted her. Yet, in saving her life, did Bessie condemn the baby she named Pearl to a life of fear and persecution?

This is Pearl’s story, and that of Bessie, plus Alf – Bessie’s then fiancé, later husband – and John, a second Han Chinese child the couple adopted.

Bessie and Alf were Methodist missionaries in Yunnan province, south west China, in the first half of the twentieth century. They lived through momentous times, including the Japanese occupation, the Second World War, the civil war, the Communist takeover and the Cultural Revolution.

©2025 Julia Bishop and Andy Bull (P)2025 Julia Bishop and Andy Bull
Historical China War Marriage Imperial Japan
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