Toronto Star

Chinese business memoir caught in a web of ‘lies’

Ping Fu has admitted some inaccuraci­es in her book, but corrected paperback doesn’t ease online criticism

- LEE ROMNEY LOS ANGELES TIMES

SAN FRANCISCO— Plug “Ping Fu” and “liar” into Google these days and the combo yields more than 6,300 hits. (See, also, “big fat liar,” “lie-fabricatin­g machine,” etc.) But it wasn’t always that way. A child of China’s Cultural Revolution, Fu arrived in the U.S. three decades ago and went on to build a successful 3D-modelling technology company and earn a seat on the Obama administra­tion’s National Advisory Council on Innovation and Entreprene­urship.

Then she did something that shifted her reputation, quite possibly forever: she wrote a memoir.

Bend Not Break: A Life in Two Worlds received glowing reviews when released last December. But soon the online critics amassed.

And so began the dissection of Ping Fu — a campaign that has underscore­d the use of the Internet as an attack tool.

Fu’s critics call themselves “truth seekers” intent on exposing her “lies.” Yet just as the 55-year-old’s memoir contains inaccuraci­es (to which she has admitted) so too does the vitriolic cybertrail.

The initial concept for the book was a collection of business tips, but Fu’s publisher wanted the profession­al story mixed with her more personal one.

Her memoir tells it this way: Fu was raised in Shanghai by an aunt and uncle. One day in 1966, as Mao Zedong was setting the Cultural Revolution in motion, Red Guards showed up to return the 8-year-old to Nanjing, the city of her birth.

She and her younger sister, Hong, were housed in a dormitory at the Nanjing University of Aeronautic­s and Astronauti­cs, where their father once taught. Their parents were considered to be “black elements” — her mother was an accountant and her father had ties to the National Party — and had been sent to the countrysid­e. So Fu raised her sister alone.

The girls were forced to denounce their lineage. At age 10, Fu was raped by a group of teens on the soccer field.

She eventually earned a seat at Suzhou University and chose China’s one-child policy as her thesis topic. When her research revealed a rural epidemic of female infanticid­e, she was brought to the authoritie­s’ attention, detained for three days and advised to leave the country.

She arrived in the U.S. in 1984 on a student visa, with little money and limited English. After studying in New Mexico, California and Illinois, Fu went to work at Bell Laboratori­es and the National Center for Supercompu­ting Applicatio­ns before cofounding Geomagic.

But barely two months after the release of her memoirs, critics flocked to Amazon.com to demand that Fu declare nearly every aspect of her story fiction.

Helping shepherd the initial effort was Fang Zhouzi, whose campaigns as a “liar hunter” have earned his microblog more than 13 million followers. It mirrored what in China is called the “human flesh search engine.” Individual­ly they had little power, but collective­ly detractors were able to boost criticism of Fu to the upper reaches of the blogospher­e.

Their doubts touched on topics in the memoir large and small:

Fu said Red Guards had driven her in a military van, but critics said chances that the teens would have had access to a vehicle were minuscule. Fu described seeing suffocated babies discarded in plastic bags. Skeptics noted such bags were rare then in rural China.

And a sexual assault by teenagers was “very unlikely if not impossible,” poster Z.C. wrote online, because “boys at that time might not know how to do sex.” In June, Suzhou University officials joined the fray, saying they had no record of Fu’s infanticid­e research or detention. Her critics obtained Fu’s old resumes from public universiti­es and research institutio­ns in the U.S., culling them for inconsiste­ncies — and found some: Early versions claim a bachelor of arts degree from Suzhou University (Fu said that her book makes clear she withdrew in her final semester); one lists a master’s degree from Suzhou (Fu said it’s likely a typo). What stirred the most outrage was the memoir’s assertion that vaginal exams were conducted on all female Suzhou University students to ensure they were not pregnant. Fu conceded she was not aware of such exams occurring on campus, but said a law prohibitin­g pregnancy among women who already had one child had prompted pelvic checks elsewhere. The practice spurred many lateterm abortions, she said, and she wanted to draw attention to it. Amid the criticism, the memoir’s publisher, Portfolio, cited Fu’s author’s note, which said that many of the events occurred “more than 40 years ago and I’ve tried as much as possible to verify the facts.” A paperback edition with fixes came out last week. But for her critics, there is no turning back. Some have remained anonymous. “Take her down by all means!” wrote someone with the handle “Sick Liar.” Others who have revealed their identities said in interviews that they were motivated by the belief that their adopted homeland relies on an honour system that Fu violated. Amy Kristin Sanders, an attorney and associate professor at the University of Minnesota’s School of Journalism & Mass Communicat­ions, said the explosive criticism seems powered in part by the importance of “reputation and honesty” in Asian culture. Adding to the effect is the Internet’s power to pull together otherwise-isolated individual­s. “These are people who may in their own geographic communitie­s never express these kinds of views,” Sanders said, “but when they see the Family members have corroborat­ed Fu’s basic story. The beloved “Uncle W.” in Fu’s memoir said he visited her at the Nanjing dorm and heard her account of rape and the taunts that followed.

To Fu, the whole experience has had an odd sense of familiarit­y.

“In the denunciati­on sessions, if you said something wrong they would hit you and tell you to say it all again,” she said.

“They are using (the Internet) as a bulletin board to shame me. In the Cultural Revolution, they put it on the wall.”

 ?? JESSE KNISH/GETTY IMAGE FILE PHOTO ?? Ping Fu, co-founder of Geomagic Inc., raised a storm of online criticism when she published her memoirs of growing up in China.
JESSE KNISH/GETTY IMAGE FILE PHOTO Ping Fu, co-founder of Geomagic Inc., raised a storm of online criticism when she published her memoirs of growing up in China.

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