Emil Fischbacher

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Protestant missions to China
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Emil Fischbacher 巴醫生 (9 August 1903-27 May 1933) was a Scottish Protestant Christian missionary to Xinjiang. He served with the China Inland Mission.

Fischbacher was born in Glasgow, August 9, 1903.

It was on the last Saturday in May 1931 that Emil Fischbacher picked up China's Millions and read the Appeal for the Two Hundred. It was on the last Saturday of May 1933, exactly two years later, that Dr. Fischbacher died in Ürümqi.

Fischbacher left London for China on 31 December 1931, he was on the last boatload of missionaries who came because of China Inland Mission's specific prayer for 200 new volunteers. His ship arrived in front of Shanghai when that city was under siege by the Japanese.

After language school in Anking, he, along with four other young men, William J. Drew, George Fox-Holmes, Aubrey Parsons, & Otto Schoerner was appointed to serve God in Xinjiang. George Hunter happened to be in Shanghai at that time (a very rare occurrence), and Emil, a gifted mechanic, drove the truck across Inner Mongolia to Urumqi.

Fischbacher died on May 27, 1933, of typhus, which he contracted during the siege of Ürümqi, when caring for people wounded during the Muslim Rebellion led by Ma Chung-ying. He was buried in Ürümqi.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Broomhall, Marshall B.; To What Purpose? (London: CIM 1933)
  • Schoerner, Otto F.; Serving Christ (Pine: Focalpoint 1997)

[edit] See also