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Love for China blooms in heart of American
Although Eunice Moe Brock lived in the US for decades, the 94-year-old has returned to China to share her passion for flowers.
 
Love for China blooms in heart of American
2011-08-12

Love for China blooms in heart of American

Eunice Moe Brock invites her neighbors in Liumiao village, Shandong province, to her garden when the flowers bloom. Photo Provided to China Daily

Eunice Moe Brock was born in Hebei, and, although she lived in the US for decades, the 94-year-old has returned to China to share her passion for flowers.

Thanks to Eunice Moe Brock, a 94-year-old grandmother from the United States, flower lovers in Liaocheng, Shandong province, can enjoy displays of irises from that country. "I bought the colorful pink and yellow seeds from a US nursery. I enjoy sharing with others. So I'm very happy seeing the flowers bringing happiness to my Chinese friends," Brock says. The flowers have been planted in her friend Yang Bengui's gardening center in Liaocheng. "Some tourists come exclusively for the American flowers," says Yang, who met Brock at a market.

"He gave me lotus plants from his flower cart," Brock says.

"I invited him to see my garden and we became friends and exchanged flowers," Brock recalls.

"She gave me nearly 100 types of exotic plant seeds, including some from the Thompson and Morgan catalog," Yang says.

Brock lives in Liumiao, a village in Liaocheng, and has government permission to settle permanently. She is honorary president of Liaocheng International Peace Hospital.

"When I moved into my home in Liumiao, I dug up the paving stones and created a garden. The village then gave me a very large area with a well to use as a garden."

Brock says she has planted cosmos flowers, larkspur, daisies, foxglove, Chinese roses and lilies, among other varieties.

"She often invites her neighbors to her garden when the flowers bloom," says Wang Yuqing, 30, who has cared for Brock for 10 years.

"I plant many kinds of flowers which I share with the villagers, some of whom also gave me flowers. It is one way to express my love for the people of China," says Brock, better known as Mu Lin'ai among locals.

Brock's attachment to China dates back to 1917 when she was born in Beidaihe, Hebei province.

Her father, John J. Moe, came to China in 1902 as a Christian missionary.

Two years later, he met Martha Laughlin of the United Kingdom on an ocean liner to China. They married and settled down in Liaocheng, producing four children, the youngest of whom was Brock.

"My parents built a summer cottage in Beidaihe to avoid the heat of summer in Liaocheng," Brock recalls, adding this is where she was principally raised.

Brock left China in 1930, when her parents ended their missionary work in China and returned to the US.

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