After studies at the University of London, the Crooks returned to China to teach English in a rural school that trained staff for the foreign service of the future government. They observed and participated in the land reform movements carried out by the
Chinese Communist Party in North China villages and produced a "
thick description" which they published in their widely cited
Ten Mile Village (1959). They entered Beijing with the victorious Communists at "Liberation" in 1949 and for the next forty years, the Crooks taught at the Peking First Foreign Languages Institute (now the
Beijing Foreign Studies University). Despite his long-time loyalty to the Chinese Communist Party, Crook was imprisoned in 1967 by
Red Guards during the
Cultural Revolution. When he was freed almost 6 years later in 1973, he found his captors sincere but misguided. After his death, his wife told
China Daily that "He was well aware that 'revolution is not a dinner party' so he never blamed China for his lengthy stay in
Qincheng prison." In 1979 his
The Chinese-English Dictionary was published by Shangwu Yinshuguan (Chubanshe), in China. Crook was convinced by reading George Orwell, on whom he had spied in Spain in the 1930s. In 1989, the Crooks criticized the suppression of the
Tiananmen Square protests. Crook remarked in his autobiography, written in 1990, that he still believed what he mentioned in his 75th birthday (in 1985) speech: "Some people say they are disillusioned by the negative aspects of Chinese society today. But
Chairman Mao said (in 1949) our past work is only the first step on a
long march of 10,000 li... Over the years I have come to realize that the re-making of a society of hundreds of millions of people, steeped in centuries of
feudalism, cannot be accomplished quickly and easily, without setbacks and mistakes. But I am confident that by the end of this century - which with a bit of luck I may live to see... this China, which Isabel and I love, which has become our second homeland, will be creating a strong socialist society, and in the course of its modernization will strive to avoid the evils, suffering, ugliness and injustice which have beset modernization elsewhere." He died in
Beijing on November 1, 2000, at the age of 90.
Beijing Foreign Studies University erected a bronze bust of him on the campus. The front of the statue's stone base is engraved with the following words mainly in accordance with his will: "In memory of David Crook (1910-2000). British, Jewish, Communist. Friend of the Chinese people. Teacher of Beijing Foreign Studies University and its forerunners since 1948". ==Personal life==