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A Taiwanese democracy

I enjoyed Gary Rawnsley’s recent piece saying that the Taiwan Academies are a poor strategy and agree with him on most of his points such as the need for soft power, the need to make culture more of a holistic strategy and the ambiguity of competing with China’s Confucius Institutes (“Taiwan Academies a poor solution,” Sept. 14, page 8). However, there is one point that he and most of the world have not yet gotten past to achieve the appropriate paradigm shift and perspective. That is his statement that Taiwan is the first Chinese democracy.

Taiwan was not the first Chinese democracy, Taiwan is the first Taiwanese democracy. This may seem like word play, but behind it lies the continuing misunderstanding and misinterpretation of Taiwanese history in which the island or parts of the island have been ruled by various colonial powers, including the Dutch, Spanish, fleeing Ming diaspora, Manchu Qing, etc. Japan of course it must be noted was the first colonial power to rule and control the whole island of Taiwan.

We do not call the US the first British democracy, nor do we call any of the South American countries once ruled by Spain and which have the common Spanish language and cultural influence, the first, second or third Spanish democracies.

The Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) is by many considered the last colonial power to rule Taiwan before it got its democracy and herein lies the rub. The KMT did not give democracy to Taiwan during its colonial one-party state rule. They forced the people to learn Mandarin and memorize all sorts of information and history about China including rivers, mountains, etc, just like the Japanese before them had forced them to learn Japanese and study Japanese history.

Democracy in Taiwan was won by the Taiwanese who by blood, sweat and suffering forced the KMT to concede it after nearly 40 years of martial law. Too often it is forgotten that the Taiwanese had also forced the Japanese to grant them the right to elect their own representatives to the Japanese Diet.

Rawnsley is correct that it is a false logic for a Taiwanese government to depend too much on a culture linked to another land. And despite the fact that the current government likes to emphasize the canard that there are Chinese on both sides of the Taiwan Strait, the reality is that there are Chinese on the continental side of the Strait and Taiwanese on the other side of the Strait.

It is time for the world to recognize this and start speaking in terms of this reality.

JEROME KEATING

Taipei

Source: Taipei Times - Letter 2011/09/17



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Newsflash


President Tsai Ing-wen, right, poses for a photograph with US Senator Marsha Blackburn yesterday.
Photo: EPA-EFE

It is important for democracies to support Taiwan as it works to preserve its independence and freedom, US Senator Marsha Blackburn said at a meeting with President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) yesterday.

“It is important ... that freedom-loving nations support Taiwan as they seek to preserve their independence,” said Blackburn, who is a member of the US Senate Armed Services Committee.