Renowned Chinese geneticist Tan Jiazhen, who died of multiple organ
dysfunction on Nov. 1 at age 99, was cremated yesterday in Shanghai.
Tan, the founding father of China's genetics, was an academician of the
Chinese Academy of Sciences and a foreign associate of the US National Academy
of Sciences, one of only 11 Chinese scientists so honored.
He introduced the translation of "gene" into the Chinese language and made
several scientific breakthroughs.
He was also a "bosom friend" of the Communist Party of China, an outstanding
scientist and educator, a remarkable leader of the China Democratic League (CDL)
and an active community leader, according to an official obituary.
Tan had acted as honorary chairman of the CDL Central Committee, vice
chairman of the standing committee of Shanghai's municipal legislature, and vice
chairman of the political advisory body in Shanghai.
He became vice president of Shanghai-based Fudan University in 1961 and
suffered persecution during the 1966-1976 Cultural Revolution.
Tan left a widow, his second wife, aged 87. His first wife died at the
beginning of the Cultural Revolution.
Chinese President Hu Jintao, former president Jiang Zemin, and other senior
leaders such as Wu Bangguo, Wen Jiabao, Jia Qinglin, Li Changchun, Xi Jinping,
Li Keqiang, He Guoqiang and Zhou Yongkang sent condolences and visited Tan's
family in his final days.
Born on Sept. 15 of 1909 in east China's Zhejiang Province, Tan graduated
from Dongwu University in 1930 and obtained a master's degree from Yenching
University in 1932, both in China, and a PhD from California Institute of
Technology in 1936. He later taught at Columbia University and returned to China
in 1937.
He held a distinguished alumni award from Caltech, received a Medal of Merit
from Germany's Konstanz University and had been designated as an honorary
citizen of California.