Wearing blue jeans and a blue shirt while making his weekly trip around the country to promote Taiwanese nationalism, Su Beng (史明) is widely revered as a man of action devoted to socialism and Taiwanese independence.
Born in 1918, Su is expected to be released from a hospital in Japan where he  has been treated for uremia and kidney problems since late last month, with a  group of activists planning to greet him at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport  on his return.
Su has been in Tokyo since late October to supervise the  reopening of the New Gourmet (新珍味), a noodle shop he opened in 1954 as a way to  earn a living and as a base for training staff who carried out anti-government  arson attacks in Taiwan in the 1970s.
The noodle shop had since become  the main source of funding for his endeavors before it closed for renovation for  much of the past year.
In 1952, Su was a fugitive wanted by the Chiang  Kai-shek (蔣介石) regime because of a plot to assassinate the  dictator.
Disguising himself as a worker at Keelung Harbor, Su managed to  stow away on a boat to Japan — where he attended Waseda University in the 1940s,  with a degree in political science and economics — and sought political asylum.  
The years spent in exile further shaped Su’s interest in socialism after  seeing the masses’ frustration with communist rule in the Soviet Union and  Eastern Europe, as well as China. He completed his classic book on the history  of Taiwan, comprehensively formulating his theory of building Taiwan as an  independent nation-state with an equitable distribution of  wealth.
Originally named Shih Chao-hui (施朝暉), he changed his name to Su  Beng — which means “historically clear” in Mandarin — to underline the  importance of getting a clear understanding of history.
Taiwan’s 400  Years of History (台灣人四百年史) was first published in Japanese in 1962 and helped  raise Taiwanese consciousness among his generation. The Mandarin and English  versions were published in the 1980s, while the updated edition that included  the period 1980-1998 came out in 1998.
Liao I-en (廖宜恩), a professor of  computer science and engineering at National Chung-Hsiung University and vice  chairman of the Taiwan Association of University Professors, was one of his  followers.
“Since the 1980s, Su has traveled regularly between Japan and  the US to lecture Taiwanese students abroad about [Taiwanese] history at his own  expense. I met him nearly every summer,” Liao said.
To reach as many as  students as possible at different US campuses, Su learned how to drive in his  60s and commuted frugally using an old vehicle.
“Su enlightened us on the  repressed history of Taiwan and told us that the first step to establish an  independent country was to shed the Chinese nationalism deeply instilled in our  brains under the Chinese Nationalist Party [KMT] regime,” Liao said.
Su’s  ideas on Taiwanese nationalism grew partly from his experience in joining the  Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) fight against Japanese forces in the War of the  Pacific between 1942 and 1945 and the following years when he came back to  Taiwan under Chiang’s rule.
Against a backdrop of a new wave of states  formed on the basis of ethnicity after World War II, Su came to believe that  there was a fundamental difference in national identity between Chinese and  Taiwanese.
Chen Fang-ming (陳芳明), the dean of the Graduate Institute of  Taiwanese Literature at National Chengchi University and a historian, said that  Su’s conception of history was mainly formed by three elements: He defined KMT  rule as another colonial regime; he viewed history from the perspective of  class; and he created the notion of Taiwanese nationalism.
“All his  analysis in this regard has passed the test of time over the past 40 years,  vividly materializing in many situations right in front of our eyes,” Chen  said.
The history of Taiwan was a continuous and linear development of  Japanese colonization to the KMT’s re-colonization, and it was not until the  first direct presidential election in 1996 that the controversy over the  legitimacy of KMT rule began to fade, Chen said.
Over the years, the  country has seen the emergence of Taiwanese nationalism and the calls for an  equal, just society and world, as globalization has worsened inequality among  and within countries, proving that Su’s thoughts have echoed down the years,  Chen said.
What impressed Chen most was not only Su’s intellectual work,  but that he has put his beliefs into practice in everyday life.
“He is a  real leftist. Unlike many self-claimed leftists who always talk the talk but  don’t walk the walk, the biggest distinction between them is that Su thinks he  can carry out his beliefs and he makes every effort to make it happen,” Chen  said.
For many Taiwanese independence activists, Su is well known for his  generosity, as he has always provided money earned from his noodle shop to help  their cause. 
When he worked on Taiwan’s 400 Years of History, he cooked  by day and wrote by night.
“He is a wonderful man, never thinking of  himself. I visited him in the 1980s, saw him prepare a very simple breakfast for  himself — rice porridge and pickles. He saved all the money he earned for the  Taiwan Independence Association [TIA] and his comrades,” Chen said.
The  blacklisted Su managed to get on a Taiwanese fishing boat back to Taiwan in 1993  and since then has worked tirelessly to educate people on Taiwan’s  history.
He organizes TIA motorcades, making the rounds on weekends to  deliver messages on Taiwanese nationalism over a megaphone. He has rewritten his  book into more readable version for elementary and junior high school students,  as well as writing other books on the 228 Incident, Western philosophy,  democracy and other topics. He has also mobilized his taxi driver base to  protest at meetings between senior KMT and CCP officials, among  others.
“What Su preaches might seem quixotic to some people, but for me,  he has been deadly earnest about what he wants to do. His mission means  everything to him, and his life is all about accomplishing his missions,” said  Nuke-4 Referendum Initiative Association chief executive Iap Phok-bun (葉博文), who  helped Su establish the Su Beng Education Foundation in 2001.
Source: Taipei Times 2009/12/01



 









