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rdfs:label
  • James Veneris
rdfs:comment
  • James George Veneris or Lao Wen (b. 1922 Vandergrift, Pennsylvania, d. before 2005 China), was a soldier in the American forces during the Korean War, was captured by the Chinese and was one of 21 US soldiers at the end of the war who decided they would rather stay in China than return to the US.
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dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
serviceyears
  • Unknown–1953
Birth Date
  • 1922
Branch
  • 20
death place
  • China
Nickname
  • Lao Wen
Name
  • James George Veneris
Birth Place
  • Vandergrift, Pennsylvania
death date
  • 2004
Rank
  • 25
Battles
abstract
  • James George Veneris or Lao Wen (b. 1922 Vandergrift, Pennsylvania, d. before 2005 China), was a soldier in the American forces during the Korean War, was captured by the Chinese and was one of 21 US soldiers at the end of the war who decided they would rather stay in China than return to the US. Veneris had served in the South Pacific during World War II, and said he re-enlisted because he couldn't find anything else to do and hoped Army life would provide security. After he chose to live in China, the Army gave Veneris a dishonorable discharge and refused to provide back pay for his time in prison camp. The Chinese gave him a stipend and moved him to Shandong province, where he was given a job in a state-run pulp factory in Jinan that turned discarded cloth shoes into toilet paper for export to Hong Kong. He and fellow former POW Howard Gayle Adams stayed in Jinan through the turmoil of the Cultural Revolution sheltered by their factory co-workers and an announcement by Premier Zhou Enlai calling them "international freedom fighters". In 1963, he was allowed to study at the People's University of China. After graduation, he returned to the same factory. His first Chinese wife died from lung disease after ten years of marriage. In 1967, he married a Chinese woman who has been divorced. In 1977, he became an English professor at Shandong University. Veneris returned to the United States twice, first in 1976 to celebrate the bicentennial and again some time in the late 1990s. He has a daughter and a son who were raised in China then moved to the US in the 1990s. He was one of the subjects of the 2005 documentary They Chose China which was directed by Shui-Bo Wang and produced by the National Film Board of Canada.