| Live From Taiwan 
 THOUSANDS IN ASIA LEARN ENGLISH — AND THE CHRISTIAN GOSPEL 
            —
 FROM “TEACHER PENG”
 
 
 
               
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                | Doris Brougham was recently in the news when ORTV 
                  formed alliances with three of Taiwan's universities and its 
                  police force to improve students' and police officers' English. |  Deana McEachern sat in the Embassy of the Republic of China (Taiwan) 
              in Seattle, embroiled in red tape. She needed a visa to visit her 
              aunt, Doris Brougham, but new obstacles arose with every passing 
              minute.BY HOPE MCPHERSON
 “I’m sorry,” she finally said to the embassy clerk. “I forgot to 
              give you my aunt’s Chinese name: Peng Meng-hui.” The clerk stopped 
              short, quickly left and returned with his boss. “You’re Peng Meng-hui’s 
              niece?” asked the supervisor. “She’s highly respected in Taiwan. 
              I learned English from her!” McEachern soon left with her visa in 
              hand.
 
 Brougham, virtually a household name in Asia, has a simple explanation 
              for her fame: “If you give God your life, you don’t know what he’s 
              going to do with it.” She received Taiwan’s highest civilian award 
              — the Order of the Brilliant Star With Violet Grand Cordon — from 
              President Chen Shui Bian in April 2002. And recently Taiwan’s minister 
              of the interior came to her offices in Taipei to award her with 
              permanent resident status, making her one of the first foreigners 
              to receive it.
 
 A 1953 alumna of Seattle Pacific College, Brougham has lived in 
              Asia for more than 50 years, remaining even when political climates 
              grew hot. “I was evacuated three times when the Communists came 
              through,” she says.
 
 Brougham’s journey East began in childhood, when she heard about 
              a spiritual famine of sorts in China. Only one-tenth of 1 percent 
              of the Chinese population was Christian, and she was determined 
              to do something about it. After attending Simpson Bible School in 
              San Francisco and the University of Washington, she packed her bags 
              and traveled to China for what she expected to be a two-year mission. 
              She returned to Seattle in 1953 just long enough to earn a degree 
              at SPC.
 
 A one-time member of the Seattle Philharmonic Orchestra, Brougham 
              played her trumpet in rural Northwest China, literally drawing villagers 
              down from the mountain to hear the Word of God. But she couldn’t 
              reach people fast enough. “They were dying faster than I could tell 
              them about God,” she says.
 
 A short time later, while on the east coast of Taiwan, Brougham 
              saw people crowded around radios in homes and temples. She asked 
              God to send someone to establish radio ministry. God’s reply: 
              Why not you?
 
 Reluctant at first, she found a pastor to preach God’s good news, 
              recruited a small singing group and, in her home, recorded a variety 
              gospel program on her tape recorder — the first brought into Taiwan. 
              Once she’d received permission from the Taiwan government station, 
              BCC, to air the programs, Brougham began pedaling her bike to the 
              station to deliver the tapes. A few years later, she founded Overseas 
              Radio & Television Inc. (ORTV).
 
 With fellow Seattleite Leland Haggerty, Brougham helped begin the 
              gospel radio station, “The Voice of Salvation.” In 1962, they added 
              the “Heavenly Melody” telecasts, featuring the Heavenly Melody singing 
              ensemble performing original Asian Christian music.
 
 Over time, Brougham refocused the broadcasts to teach English, often 
              incorporating topics such as forgiveness and compassion into the 
              language curriculum. “When we teach English, we don’t actually teach 
              just English, but a global view — lifestyles, health, values and 
              relationships,” she says.
 
 That gets tricky in China, though, where ORTV is now also heard. 
              Brougham and her staff stay away from sensitive topics, and when 
              American-Chinese diplomatic relations are strained, she says, they 
              feel it. Yet with her love of teaching as strong today as decades 
              ago, Brougham remains one of the primary English language teachers 
              in Asia. Known as Teacher Peng, she’s credited with teaching English 
              to thousands.
 
 Brougham’s mission work continues as well. She and her colleagues 
              hold Bible studies, rallies, conferences and youth camps. The singing 
              group Heavenly Melody still tours and shares the gospel.
 
 And ORTV continues to grow. Today the station reaches hundreds of 
              millions of people in Asia, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, 
              Europe, Brazil, Canada and the United States. It broadcasts several 
              popular radio and television shows, “Let’s Talk in English,” “Studio 
              Classroom” and “Studio Coffee Corner,” and it publishes the magazine 
              Advanced.
 
 Last summer, Brougham traveled to Seattle with the crew and actors 
              of “Let’s Talk in English” and “Studio Coffee Corner.” In Seattle, 
              they filmed episodes for the shows’ entire year, with each segment 
              delivering English lessons related to events such as opening a bank 
              account, going to a restaurant and enrolling in an American university. 
              Brougham insisted that the university featured be Seattle Pacific 
              University.
 
 Calling herself a “penny-pinching missionary,” Brougham packed her 
              stay with activity up and down the West Coast. Heavenly Melody 
              joined her to tour in Seattle; Portland, Oregon; Vancouver, British 
              Columbia; Los Angeles; and San Francisco.
 
 McEachern accompanied the group and saw again the extent of her 
              aunt’s influence. Many concert-goers told McEachern they’d learned 
              English from her aunt, and people lined up for the autograph of 
              Teacher Peng.
 
 Still surprised at the turns of her life, Brougham shrugs. “The 
              main thing is to be willing to do what God asks you to do,” she 
              says. “I had to learn that from the very beginning.”
 PHOTOS COURTESY OF ORTV
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