Taiwan Tati Cultural and Educational Foundation

 
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101 2020-01-04 Holy Mountain - Volunteering Fulfilling Wishes Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 417
102 2020-01-03 Choir Rehearsal Part 3 Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 452
103 2020-01-02 Researchers Visit Holy Mountain Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 410
104 2020-01-01 Northen Taichung Tati(Daixde) Branch Year-end Clean-up Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 295
105 2019-12-30 Hualien Tati(Daixde) Branch Year-end Cleaning Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 284
106 2019-12-29 Northen Taichung Tati(Daixde) Branch Year-end Cleaning Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 262
107 2019-12-28 Holy Mountain Year-end Clean-up Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 274
108 2019-12-27 Choir Rehearsal Part 2 Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 273
109 2019-12-26 Tati(Daixde) Hall Dec. 1st Ritual Prayer Nationwide for Peace and Blessings Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 246
110 2019-12-25 Keelung Tati(Daixde) Branch Year-end Cleaning Taiwan Tati Cultural & Educational Foundation 263
 
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Newsflash

The New York Times ran a major feature about Prince of Tears (淚王子), a movie set in 1950s Taiwan that exposes the brutality of the White Terror, which may surprise readers in the US who know little about Taiwan’s bloody past.

The Hong Kong-datelined report, published on Tuesday, opens: “The story usually goes like this: China was taken over by Chairman Mao [Zedong (毛澤東)] and became a brutal Communist state. Taiwan broke free and became a vibrant democracy. The ugliness of the last half-century — persecution, martial law, mass execution — happened on the mainland.”