I found some information about Dr. Bethune. This is one of them, about his life in China--less than two years. But I did not find any infromation useing Chinese search engine.
http://www.sd83.bc.ca/stu/9806/mabf1.html
Norman Bethune: China & Death
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Working with the China Aid Council and the China Defense League, Bethune again left Canada on January 2, 1938, not knowing that it would be the last time he saw Canada again.
Bethune was to head a medical unit in Northern China which was under attack from the Japanese. In a letter to Frances he wrote "I refuse to live in a world that spawns murder and corruption without raising my hand against them. I refuse to condone, by passivity, or by default, the wars which greedy men make against others...Spain and China are part of the same battle. I am going to China because that is where I feel the need is greatest; that is where I can be most useful."
Bethune, known as Bai Quien to the Chinese, worked as a medic in the Sino-Japanese War. He trained thousands of inexperienced Chinese to become medics and doctors. Bethune's mobile blood unit proved very successful and saved the lives of many soldiers.
Unfortunately, Bethune contacted septicemia, or blood poisoning when he cut himself during an operation. He died on November 12, 1939 at Huang Shiko. Bethune's body was buried in the Mausoleum of Martyrs, in the city of Shih Cha Chuang, southeast of Peking. The Mausoleum houses portraits of China's best-known heroes, and Bethune's portrait and statue still remain there. After Bethune's death, Mao Tse-tung, revolutionary leader of China, said about Bethune, "We mourn more than the passing of a man. Dr. Bethune's devotion to the people is a lesson for all. [Bethune was] a man of importance, integrity, of virtue who forsakes self-interest for the interest of the people. The death of comrade Bethune is a great bereavement. The Chinese nation will recall him with love and admiration...". The Bethune Medical School and the Bethune International Peace Hospital were also built on Shih Cha Chuang as a tribute to Norman Bethune.
Because of his Communist ties, Bethune was not recognized as a hero in Canada for quite some time. However, in 1973 the Canadian government bought the house in Gravenhurst, Ontario where Bethune was born and named it the Bethune Memorial House. It stands as a reminder of Bethune's self-sacrifice and dedication.