China Daily

80 years on, spirit of Flying Tigers still soars

- By LIA ZHU in Las Vegas liazhu@chinadaily­usa.com

It was a rare and heartwarmi­ng sight when a 103-year-old Flying Tigers veteran, Harry Moyer, and a 13-year-old boy, Zane Richie, sat face-to-face and delved into the heroics of US pilots who fought alongside China more than 80 years ago.

“What do you think about the Flying Tigers?” Moyer, who fought throughout World War II, asked gently.

“They’re pretty cool,” the seventh grader replied, brimming with enthusiasm. “I tell my mom and dad, and most of my friends about them.”

“Atta boy!” Moyer shot back. “That’s what we have to do. You have to tell everybody. It’s up to you guys now.”

Moyer, impressed by the “energy and output” of young people like Zane, was visiting Schofield Middle School in Las Vegas, named after a late Flying Tigers pilot, Jack Lund Schofield.

The legendary pilot Moyer received a warm welcome at Schofield. When the principal announced their guest — an original Flying Tiger pilot — the hall erupted in applause.

“Flying Tiger means so much more than just a name,” Moyer said. “A great friendship was forged then, a bond created between our two peoples at a terrible time in China’s history. It’s just wonderful this continues all this time.”

In 1941 a group of US volunteer pilots fought courageous­ly alongside the Chinese people during the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression (1931-45). After the group was dissolved in 1942 members who wished to be were absorbed into the US 10th Air Force and became the nucleus of the China Air Task Force, which was reorganize­d in 1943 as the 14th Air Force.

Moyer, himself a fighter pilot in the 14th Air Force, had fought in the Mediterran­ean before arriving on the airfields in Chengdu, Sichuan province.

At Schofield every student knows their school’s namesake, Jack Lund Schofield, a bomber pilot of the 14th Air Force based in Yangkai airfield in Yunnan province, who became an educator after the war.

“I knew about (the Flying Tigers) the first day I entered the school,” said Amia Aromin, a student council member. She understood the significan­ce — the Flying Tigers connects their school to a middle school in China.

“I think it’s really interestin­g to keep the schools in contact through the Flying Tigers and keep the symbol alive and give it to future generation­s,” she said.

Samantha Lopez, another student council member, helped prepare a gift for the Chinese school — an artwork crafted with bottles and paper. In return, they received a painting from China — a tiger with wings, bearing the inscriptio­n “Long live China-US friendship”.

The Chinese government is inviting more US students to visit China, and 20 students from Schofield may soon embark on a journey to meet their Chinese pals and immerse themselves in their culture.

“We need a new generation now to carry that story forward,” Moyer said. “And it looks like it’s in good hands.”

 ?? REN CHAO / XINHUA ?? Flying Tigers veteran Harry Moyer (front right) visits the Great Wall in Beijing on Oct 29.
REN CHAO / XINHUA Flying Tigers veteran Harry Moyer (front right) visits the Great Wall in Beijing on Oct 29.

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