https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/19/world/europe/jan-myrdal-dead.html

Published Nov. 19, 2020
Updated Nov. 29, 2020

Jan Myrdal, a radical Swedish writer who spurned the liberal politics of his 
famous Nobel-winning parents and embraced Communism, Marxism and Maoism, died 
on Oct. 30 in Varberg, Sweden. He was 93.

His death was announced by Cecilia Cervin, a former chairman of the Jan Myrdal 
Society, a group dedicated to preserving his extensive book collection.

Mr. Myrdal traveled and wrote widely, specializing in Asia. He depicted life in 
a small Chinese village during the Chinese Revolution, and his writings 
extolled the virtues of authoritarians. He abhorred the damaging effects of 
Western imperialism on developing countries.

But perhaps nothing in his career as a polemicist garnered him as much 
attention as the books he wrote expressing his distaste for his parents, Gunnar 
and Alva Myrdal. The elder Mr. Myrdal was an economist and sociologist who 
shared the 1974 Nobel in economic science with Friedrich A. von Hayek and wrote 
“An American Dilemma: The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy” (1944), a 
pioneering study of race.

A cabinet minister and Sweden’s ambassador to India, Mrs. Myrdal split the 1982 
Nobel Peace Prize for her work promoting nuclear disarmament.

But to Jan, his parents were cold, cruel and contemptuous. They called him a 
“problem child” and left him with relatives (whom he preferred) for extended 
periods when they traveled.

In several autobiographical works he called novels, beginning with “Childhood” 
(1982), Mr. Myrdal wrote that his father had mocked him for being overweight, 
asking him, “Are you going to give birth soon?” He said his mother had treated 
him like a research subject, recording what he said in a notebook.

Once, he recalled, Gunnar drove his car into a ditch, causing Jan to fall out 
of the car and hit his head. Bleeding and hoping for sympathy, he heard his 
father tell him, “Don’t act silly.”

“Since then, I’ve had a scar on my forehead: a triangle,” Mr. Myrdal told The 
Tampa Bay Times in 1992. “As if I had been branded.”

His feelings of not belonging led him, when he was about 10, to ask his father, 
“Am I your illegitimate son?” The question angered the elder Myrdal, who did 
not answer, slamming the door behind him.

The accusations against the prominent Myrdals stirred a scandal in Sweden — not 
long before Mrs. Myrdal was awarded her Nobel — and turned “Childhood” into a 
best seller.

When excerpts from the book ran in newspapers, they had headlines like “I 
Detest My Mother and My Father Because They Never Gave Me Love.”

Jan Myrdal was born on July 19, 1927, in Stockholm and moved with his parents 
and younger sisters, Sissela and Kaj, to New York City in 1938; his father had 
been hired by the Carnegie Corporation to study racism in the United States.

Jan enjoyed living in Manhattan, where he attended private school and read with 
fascination books about the French Revolution and the works of the Swedish 
writer August Strindberg.

But he was angry when his parents made plans to return to Sweden in 1942. The 
pending move led to a fight with his father, who, he said, grabbed him by the 
neck, shook him hard and pinned him to the floor.

At 15, calling himself a Communist, Jan left his family, dropped out of school 
and began a peripatetic decades-long career as a writer, provocateur and public 
intellectual.

“I chose to write,” he told United Press International in 1987. “It meant I had 
to break with school and that kind of education. That I knew from Strindberg 
and others. One had to make oneself impossible from the start, tear down 
bridges.”

Mr. Myrdal began writing books in the mid-1950s, but none attracted much 
attention until he wrote “Report From a Chinese Village” (1965), which was 
based on a month that he spent in 1962 interviewing the people of Liu Ling, a 
tiny rural collection of man-made caves.

“In many ways, this is the book that everybody interested in China has been 
waiting for, a book describing what it feels like to be a peasant living 
through the Chinese Revolution,” Martin Bernal, an expert on Chinese political 
history, wrote in The New York Review of Books. He praised the book for the 
candid stories told by the villagers.

Some of Mr. Myrdal’s other foreign travel work and political commentary raised 
questions about his allegiances, or was seen as overly sympathetic to 
authoritarian rulers.

His “Report From a Chinese Village” and one of its sequels, “Return to a 
Chinese Village” (1984), were viewed as uncritical of the brutality of the 
Cultural Revolution.

In 1970, after visiting Albania, then still ruled by the dictator Enver Hoxha, 
Mr. Myrdal published “Albania Defiant.” Writing in The New York Times Book 
Review, the journalist and author Anatole Shub wrote that the book conveyed 
“the Gospel according to Hoxha in basically uncritical, dogmatic Marxist terms” 
and showed “unlimited admiration” for the Albanian people and for Hoxha’s brand 
of socialism.

Then, in October 1979, Mr. Myrdal visited Cambodia shortly after the dictator 
Pol Pot had largely been driven from power by Vietnam but still controlled 
parts of the country after conducting a reign of terror that led to the deaths 
of nearly a quarter of Cambodia’s seven million people. Mr. Myrdal had met him 
a year earlier, and Pol Pot had signed Mr. Myrdal’s visa.

After his trip, where he had a government official for a babysitter, Mr. Myrdal 
told The Times that he had seen no “horror stories.”

Mr. Myrdal went on to punctuate a visit to Iran in 1990 by voicing his support 
for Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s fatwa that Muslims should kill the writer 
Salman Rushdie for what Khomeini called blasphemy in the Rushdie novel “The 
Satanic Verses.” Mr. Myrdal told a Swedish newspaper that the cleric’s order 
had allowed oppressed Muslim masses in Europe to be part of a struggle “for 
their human dignity.”

Mr. Myrdal’s survivors include his sisters, Sissela Bok, an ethicist and 
philosopher, and Kaj Folster, a writer. Three of his four marriages ended in 
divorce. His third wife, Gun Kessle, whose photographs illustrated many of her 
husband’s books, died in 2007.

In 1967, well after Mr. Myrdal had become estranged from his parents, the 
police in Stockholm beat him with batons and arrested him during an 
anti-Vietnam War protest.

Still, even in a protest against the United States in the streets of his 
hometown, he could not avoid the scrutiny of his parents. His mother, then a 
cabinet minister, had joined the government's decision to deny the protesters a 
permit, and his father publicly criticized his son for demonstrating.

“He was insane,” Jan Myrdal said of his father’s rebuke. “And six months 
earlier, Alva had said we should stop seeing each other to avoid compromising 
her position.”

Correction: Nov. 20, 2020
An earlier version of this obituary misquoted in part a review of Mr. Myrdal's 
book "Report From a Chinese Village" in The New York Review of Books in 1965. 
The reviewer, Martin Bernal, wrote that the book describes "what it feels like 
to be a peasant living through the Chinese Revolution," not "the Cultural 
Revolution," which came later.


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