Ernst Schwarz (chinese æÂ©æÂ¯ç¹÷æÂ½è¯滠/ æÂ½åÂÂæ»Â, 6 August 1916, Vienna â 6 September 2003, Münichreith) was an Austrian sinologist, translator and author.
Ernst Josef Schwarz was born as the youngest of four siblings in Vienna-Hietzing. His Jewish parents, Berta (née Stern, 1881âÂÂ1926) and Desiderius Schwarz (1872âÂÂ1935), owned a prosperous merchant business on Mariahilfer StraÃÂe. Having grown up in a sheltered environment, he began to study medicine in 1935 and changed later to the Faculty of Philosophy â Egyptology, at the University of Vienna. After the annexation of Austria to the German Reich in March 1938, he was forced to leave the university and, shortly thereafter, the country, as he was doubly endangered â as a Jew due to the racial policies and additionally due his prohibited social democratic activities. While his two sisters Lilli (married Hofstätter) and Francisca (married Fischl) managed to move to the United States, he emigrated with his brother Egon by sea to Shanghai. This city was one of the very few places in the world that took in Jews and other refugees without visas or financial resources at that time. Initially, Schwarz lived with his also Jewish fiancée from Vienna, then his wife Annemarie (née Hecht, later married Pordes) in the French Concession. In Shanghai he learned Chinese through self-study, while he worked as a physical education teacher. Occasionally he stayed in Buddhist monasteries, where he began studying classical Chinese. However, during the Japanese occupation in World War II, living conditions for Jewish emigrants and exiles changed dramatically in the Shanghai Ghetto from 1941 onwards (Pacific War). Survival became increasingly difficult, there was hardly any food, and racial persecution threatened once again. For two years, he found protection from persecution in a Buddhist monastery in southern Shanghai, led by Fan Cheng (èÂÂè¯Â). However, the marriage fell apart during this difficult time of war and occupation.
In 1945, after divorcing his wife, he worked in Nanjing as a translator. During his employment at the National Central Library in Nanjing (Zhà ÂngyÃÂng túshà «guÃÂn, now Nanjing Library), he collaborated with the poet Mao Yumei (è äºÂç¾Â) on the prestigious project of translating Shen Deqian's extensive collection of ancient poetry sources (å¤詩æºÂ, GÃÂshëyuán) into English. In 1946âÂÂ47 he also taught English literature at the Private University of Nanking. From 1947 to 1950, he was secretary at the Austrian Legation in Nanjing. He was involved here when, in 1949, with the help of US Ambassador John Leighton Stuart, good relations were to be established between the newly founded People's Republic of China and the USA. In addition to his official duties, Ernst Schwarz initiated the establishment of the Sino-Austrian Cultural Association (SACA) with the support of envoy Felix Stumvoll. Zhu Jiahua, Minister of Education in the Kuomintang government, played a major role in establishing important contacts for this purpose. Among the renowned supporters of SACA was Zong Baihua (å®Âç½è¯ / å®Âç½åÂÂ), with whom Schwarz would share a lifelong friendship. But the legation was closed in 1950 (in this phase of the Cold War, particularly after the beginning of Korean War, also Austria breaks off diplomatic relations with the now Maoist China). Subsequently, he worked again as a translator, this time for the Foreign Languages Press in Beijing. From 1958 to 1960, he taught English at the Hangzhou University (Hángzhà Âu Dàxué, now Zhejiang University). Here he met Xia Chengtao (å¤ÂæÂ¿çÂÂ) in 1958, who is considered a pioneer of Chinese philology. As a professor and member of the Academy, he conducted research on the poetry of the Tang and Song dynasties and became an important discussion partner and friend to Ernst Schwarz. But during the Great Leap Forward, he was physically ill, increasingly mentally and morally exhausted, and once again politically persecuted, he knew that he had to leave People's Republic of China as quickly as possible. But only a few â socialist â countries still had diplomatic representations in China, but which were necessary for obtaining permission to leave China. The consulate of the GDR offered rescue and promised at the same time work at a university.
Together with his wife, Amina Agischewa, whom he had married in 1953, and his little daughter, via the cargo ship route North Korea, Burma, Great Britain, and Belgium, he finally arrived in the GDR. Between 1961 and 1970, he taught Chinese language and literature as a research assistant and later as a lector at the East Asian Institute of the Humboldt University in East Berlin. In 1965, he received his doctorate in philosophy with a thesis on the problems of Qu Yuan research. After he retired from the University, he worked as a freelance translator and held occasional lectures at the Diplomatic Academy of Vienna. Chancellor of Austria Bruno Kreisky arranged him a teaching position at the Diplomatic Academy. He was personally acquainted with Trade Minister Fritz Bock, a childhood friend, Foreign Minister Rudolf Kirchschläger, Science Minister Hertha Firnberg, Health Minister Ingrid Leodolter, Friedrich Hoess diplomat, and Chief Magistrate Josef Bandion, among others. Over the years, Schwarz made various efforts to expand cultural and economic relations between the GDR, Austria, and China. His numerous contacts, in connection with his Austrian citizenship, but also partly his memberships in the Association of Persecutees of the Nazi Regime â Federation of Antifascists, in the Writers' Association of the GDR, and in PEN International (PEN Center of the GDR or German PEN Center East) were helpful. After Deng Xiaoping's reform and opening-up policy allowed direct contact and travel again, Schwarz met up with an old friend from his time in Nanjing: Wang Zhimin (çÂÂå¿Âæ°Â), who had survived the various persecutions and deportations as a âÂÂrightist deviantâÂÂ. The two developed various exchange projects with China.
In 1993, Schwarz returned from Berlin to Vienna. In 1994, it came to light that he worked for the Ministry of State Security of the GDR (called "Stasi"); he admitted his activities as an unofficial collaborator, without publicly repenting it. He retired to Münichreith in the Waldviertel, Lower Austria, where he spent his latter years.
Ernst Schwarz was best known for his translations of classical poems and philosophical texts from Chinese, which proved to be very popular with the reading public and they set high standards concerning Tao Yuan-Ming, Confucius and Lao Tse in the German-speaking world. His later publications increasingly addressed Buddhist themes. In 1999, he presented the first complete German translation of the Blue Cliff Record. After Richard Wilhelm, he was the second sinologist in the German-speaking world to make significant contributions to the popularization of Chinese thought, through a wide range of translations with high print runs. According to Yu Ligong (ä¿ÂÃ¥ÂÂå·¥), 2004âÂÂ2011 president of the Association of Chinese Language Writers in Europe, it can be said without bias that contemporary sinologists in the West who have made such significant contributions to the field of cultural exchange between China and the West can be counted on the fingers of one hand.
He also wrote a series of essays, for example for Die Weltbühne, but also for radio broadcasts (Deutschlandradio and others).
His autobiography, Tausend Tore hat die Wahrheit (A Thousand Gates have the Truth), was supposed to be published in Berlin in 2001, but it was not released as a book to the market.
In 1981, Ernst Schwarz received the F.-C.-Weiskopf Prize and in 1992 the Ehrenmedaille der Bundeshauptstadt Wien in Gold (Honorary Medal of the Federal Capital Vienna in Gold) to serve as recognition for special achievements for Vienna in cultural, scientific, or economic fields.
He is the father of Melan Schwarz (梠æ¾Â.æÂ½åÂÂæ»Â) aka the film and television actress Marijam Agischewa.