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Yuan Longping - "Father of Hybrid Rice"

by Jiaqi Zhang

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Yuan Longping
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--"Father of Hybrid Rice"
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My greatest wish in life is to rid mankind of famine and feed the whole world.
我一生最大的梦想就是让人类摆脱饥荒,让全世界人民吃饱饭。
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By Eleanor Zhang
Content
1. Overview

2. Early Life

3. Research Experience

4. Contribution
1
Overview
Yuan Longping was born on Sept. 7, 1930, in Beijing — or Beiping, as it was then called — into a family that was unusually well-educated for that time. And passed away on May. 22nd, 2021.
Yuan Longping was a Chinese agronomist and member of the Chinese Academy of Engineering known for developing the first hybrid rice varieties in the 1970s, part of the Green Revolution in agriculture. For his contributions, Yuan is known as the "Father of Hybrid Rice".
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Early Life
Yuan Longping was born on Sept. 7, 1930, in Beijing — or Beiping, as it was then called — into a family that was unusually well-educated for that time. His mother, Hua Jing, taught English and his father, Xinglie Yuan, was a schoolteacher who later became a railroad official.
Mr. Yuan often cited the example set by his mother. “She was an educated woman at a time when they were uncommon,” he said in a memoir published in 2010. “From early on I came under her uplifting influence.”
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Mr. Yuan was the second of six siblings. His life and schooling were unsettled as war, the Japanese invasion and economic upheaval forced the family to move around southern China. But he said his parents insisted that their children receive a solid education. He entered college in 1949, just as the Chinese Communist Party was consolidating its control of the country, and chose to specialize in agronomy in a school in the southwest.
His initial inspiration for choosing agricultural science — despite not having a rural background, and the misgivings of his parents — came partly from visiting a farm for a school excursion, and partly from an idyllic scene in Charlie Chaplin’s film “Modern Times,” in which the Little Tramp savors grapes and fresh milk at the doorstep of his home. “As I grew older, the desire became stronger, and agronomy became my life’s vocation,” he wrote in his memoir.
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Mr. Yuan chose to specialize in crop genetics at a time when the subject was an ideological minefield in China.
Mao Zedong had embraced the doctrines of Soviet scientists who rejected modern genetics and maintained that genes could be directly rewired by altering environmental conditions, such as the temperature. They claimed this would open the way to dramatic rises in crop yields.
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