Mark Gayn

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Mark Gayn (1902–1981) was an American and Canadian journalist, who worked for The Toronto Star for 30 years.[1][2]

Biography

Mark J. Gayn was born in 1902 in China to Russian-Jewish parents who had migrated from the Russian Empire. He went to school in Vladivostok.

He got into his career in the 1930s as a stringer (journalism) for Washington Post in the City of Shanghai, China. Mark 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 (IPR) Amerasia office in June 1945.

However, the charges were dropped shortly thereafter - the New York Times described him as "quickly vindicated in the courts."[2] The State Department refused to admit his Hungarian-born wife 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 USA, Mark Gayn's work appeared within The New York Times as well as in Newsweek and in Time magazine.

Death

At the time of his death from cancer on December 17 of 1981, Mark J. Gayn was still the Senior Foreign Affairs Correspondent for The Toronto Star in the City of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Legacy

While no known connection to the assassination of John F. Kennedy can be found, in his ebook entitled JFK Assassination Chronology, Playwright Ira David Wood 3rd thought enough of this journalist that he should be included in his work on JFK anyway.

During his life, Mark J. Gayn wrote four books - The Fight For The Pacific published in 1942, Journey From The East: An Autobiography published in 1944, Japan Diary published in 1948 and republished in 1989 and New Japan Diary which was published after his death in December 1981.

References