Background
Hunter was born in Kincardineshire, and spent his childhood on Deeside.
胡进洁
Hunter was born in Kincardineshire, and spent his childhood on Deeside.
He served with the Inland Mission. Hunter"s mother died when he was still very small. When he was young he was in love with a woman named Jessie, but she died young (at age 22), and was buried at Aberdeen.
Hunter wanted to serve God in missions.
The first time he applied for service abroad, he was refused, and focused his attention on serving God at home in places like the Young Men’s Christian Association. The second time he applied with the Inland Mission he was finally accepted. Hunter arrived in 1889.
After studying the Chinese language for two years at Anking, he was sent to the Gansu mission station. Although he liked the prayer and Bible study times with his fellow missionaries, rules and regulations and meal times were irksome to him, and he took long itinerations, establishing temporary centers at Hochow, Sining, Ningxia, and Liangchow.
When the Boxer Rebellion broke out the governor of Gansu helped his missionaries to get safely out of, and then Hunter took his one and only visit back to Scotland.
Here he visited the grave of Jesse, and put a granite heart over it, as her family would not allow him to erect a tombstone. He had made a resolution during language school not to marry, so that he could be more fully devoted to God. He departed for a second time on 24 February 1902 on the South.S. König Albert and on arriving in was reappointed to Lanchow.
Again he made many long journeys in the countryside.
Xinjiang and Gansu On 27 March 1906 he moved to Urumqi (Tihwafu), Xinjiang. The next forty years he spent mostly traveling.
He traveled all throughout Xinjiang, and even went as far as Khovd. During his travels he preached in Kazakh, Uyghur, Manchu, Mongolian, Nogai, Arabic, and Chinese, and distributed gospel literature in those languages.
He would also visit and encourage a 200 family settlement of White Russians who had settled in Gulja.
Under Sheng Shicai"s regime, he was arrested under false charges, and locked up in a Soviet prison cell in Ürümqi for thirteen months and subjected to various tortures. Finally he was released, and escorted out of the city. He then went to Lanchow, Gansu, and later on farther west to Kanchow, hoping that when Xinjiang opened up again, he would be ready to go back.
He died in Zhangye (then Kanchow), Gansu, on 20 December 1946.