Oddly, nobody recalls gingkos' origins.No one remembers when they were planted on the small plot of land at the southeast corner of the national church office--two gingko gingko, n Latin name: Gingko biloba; parts used: leaves; uses: vascular insufficiency, antioxidant, circulation, cognitive enhancement, depression, headaches, tinnitus, altitude sickness, intermittent claudication; precautions: patients with trees whose leaf extracts, ironically, are reported to stop memory loss. General Secretary Jim Boyles, whose office faces one of the trees (the primate's office overlooks the other), recalls only that they had been planted by "Bishop White" when he returned from China. Why the interest in these trees? When the national office moves to its new quarters on 80 Hayden St. later this month, the trees will be cut by the developer. Archdeacon Boyles mentioned the trees' fate to a visiting delegation from China last year. The delegation promised to send two new saplings that can be planted in the new surroundings. "Bishop White" was William Charles White William Charles White (August 31, 1865 – June 14, 1943) was the 5th Anglican Bishop of Newfoundland (1918 - 42). Born at Trinity Bay, Newfoundland, his father was Dr. Robert White. William White was the first native born bishop of the Diocese of Newfoundland. , the first Anglican bishop of Honan Honan: see Henan, China. , China and the first Canadian bishop to be consecrated con·se·crate tr.v. con·se·crat·ed, con·se·crat·ing, con·se·crates 1. To declare or set apart as sacred: consecrate a church. 2. Christianity a. for service in the mission field. He was also the man after whom the Royal Ontario Museum The Royal Ontario Museum, commonly known as the ROM (rhyming with Tom), is a major museum for world culture and natural history in the city of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (ROM) named its collection of rare and ancient Chinese art--the Bishop White Gallery of Chinese Temple Art. Bishop White was "a dedicated gardener all his life," according to Lewis C. Walmsley in his book, Mission and Museum, The Life of William C. White William Clarence "Willie" White (1854–1937) was secretary (a term now referred to as "director") of the Ellen G. White Estate. He was placed in charge of his mother's (Ellen G. White) estate at her death in 1915. , published by the University of Toronto Research at the University of Toronto has been responsible for the world's first electronic heart pacemaker, artificial larynx, single-lung transplant, nerve transplant, artificial pancreas, chemical laser, G-suit, the first practical electron microscope, the first cloning of T-cells, Press. The book, based mostly from accounts in Bishop White's diaries, does not mention him bringing the saplings to Toronto, but he may have chosen to bring back gingko trees because of their deeper meaning in Chinese life. The gingko is normally planted in Buddhist temples and monastic gardens, where it is venerated as a holy tree. Ordained a deacon in 1896, Bishop White arrived as a missionary in Kaifeng, China, in 1897. In 1909, he became the first bishop in the see of Honan, a position that he held until 1934. When he ended his term, he had lived through some of the most difficult and turbulent decades in Chinese history. He arrived in China during one of its worst famines, at the height of an epidemic of cholera, leprosy leprosy or Hansen's disease (hăn`sənz), chronic, mildly infectious malady capable of producing, when untreated, various deformities and disfigurements. and opium addiction. He immediately joined relief organizations and immersed himself in Chinese life, even discarding his Western garb for Chinese clothes, and letting his own hair grow to have a queue just like Chinese men. Captivated cap·ti·vate tr.v. cap·ti·vat·ed, cap·ti·vat·ing, cap·ti·vates 1. To attract and hold by charm, beauty, or excellence. See Synonyms at charm. 2. Archaic To capture. by Chinese culture, archaeology and religion, he became an eager pupil of C.T. Currelly, curator of archaeology at the ROM, whom he met while visiting Toronto in 1924. Back in China, he began collecting for the ROM, sending pre-historic pottery, jade ornaments, Buddhist sculptures, and Chinese wall paintings, among others. After ending his term in Honan in 1934, he became director of the school of Chinese studies at the University of Toronto. He also became keeper of the Chinese collection at the ROM. Bishop White is also remembered for fighting to put the church that he established in Chinese hands. During the General Synod of 1934, conservatives had strongly opposed the move to appoint a Chinese bishop, but Bishop White prevailed. In a letter, Bishop White wrote: "I feel as if a great load has been removed from my shoulders and I now leave China with an easy heart for God has set his seal on my work by this culminating act." |
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