Background
Qian was born in Yixing in Jiangsu Province in 1912 to a large and well connected family.
钱秀玲
Qian was born in Yixing in Jiangsu Province in 1912 to a large and well connected family.
She had a street named after her and a sixteen episode TV drama was made of her life for Chinese television. In 1929, she left for Europe to study chemistry in Belgium at the Catholic University of Leuven. In 1939, one source suggests that she travelled to Paris in hopes of studying in Marie Curie's laboratory but (so it is suggested) the whole facility had been moved to the United States because of the war.
In June 1940, her town of Herbeumont was occupied by the German army when a Belgian youth blew up a military train by burying a mine under the railway. The youth was sentenced to death, but Qian realised that she knew the German general who was in charge of Belgium. She had known General Alexander von Falkenhausen when he was working in China as part of the Sino-German cooperation.
Falkenhausen had been an advisor to Chiang Kai-Shek and he worked closely with Qian's elder cousin, Lieutenant General Qian Zhuolun. She wrote a letter and travelled to see Falkenhausen, who decided to use his authority to spare the boy for reasons of humanity. On 7 June 1944, Qian was contacted again when the Germans had taken 97 Belgians prisoner under sentence of death in revenge for three Gestapo officers who had been killed in the nearby town of Ecaussinnes.
He hesitated but eventually agreed to release the people, although he knew that he was disobeying an order. The general was summoned to Berlin to explain his insubordination. Falkenhausen was spared German trial and punishment by the war's end, but was arrested for war crimes.
He was tried in Belgium in 1951. Qian appeared at the trial and pleaded for Falkenhausen's good character. He was sentenced for twelve years for executing hostages and deporting Jews, but was released after three weeks and retired to Germany where he died in 1966.
Qian's story was made into a sixteen-episode Chinese TV drama, Chinese Woman Facing Gestapo's Gun, starring Xu Qing. She was given a medal by the Belgians after the war but she never told her family in China of her story. In 2003, Qian's granddaughter, Tatiana de Perlinghi, made a documentary film entitled Ma grand-mère, une héroïne? (My grandma, a heroine?).
In 2005, she was thanked by Zhang Qiyue the Chinese Ambassador to Belgium who visited the rest home where she lived. Qian's husband had died in 1966. There is a street named Rue Perlinghi in her honour in the city of Ecaussinnes.
A novel by Zhang Yawen was published in 2003 with the English title of Chinese Woman at Gestapo Gunpoint.