Mark Gayn
Mark Gayn, born Mark Julius Ginsbourg was an American and Canadian journalist, who worked for The Toronto Star for 30 years.
Background
Mark Julius Ginsbourg was born in 1909 in Barim, Manchuria, in the Qing Empire to Russian-Jewish parents who had migrated from the Russian Empire. He went to school in Vladivostok in the Soviet Union and then in Shanghai, China. He was accepted to Pomona College in Claremont, California, in the United States where he majored in political science. Following his graduation from Pomona, he entered the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, graduating in 1934.Career
Ginsbourg got into his career in the 1930s as a stringer for The Washington Post in the Shanghai. He returned to the U.S. shortly after World War II broke out in Europe, changing his name to Gayn to prevent Japanese reprisals against his brother Sam, who remained in Japanese-occupied Shanghai. Gayn also went on to write for Collier's and was arrested in the FBI raid on the offices of the Institute for Pacific Relations' Amerasia office in June 1945, on charges of illegally procuring and publishing secret government information. At the time of his arrest, he was reporting not only for Colliers but also the Chicago Sun as well as TIME Magazine.However, the charges were dropped shortly thereafter—The New York Times described him as "quickly vindicated in the courts." The State Department refused to admit his Hungarian-born wife Suzanne Lengvary to the United States, on the grounds of her alleged Communist sympathies, so he moved to Canada and continued his work as a foreign affairs correspondent.
He filed reports on North Korean dictator Kim Il Sung's repression and, as one of the first Western journalists admitted into China in the mid-1960s, he managed to criticize the country's Maoist regimentation.
Within the U.S., Gayn's work appeared within The New York Times as well as in Newsweek and in Time magazine.