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The tragedy of being Taiwanese

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The tragedy of being Taiwanese
By Chang Kuo-tsai 張國財

220px-Flag_of_the_Republic_of_China.svg.png


Taiwan, officially the Republic of China, is a state in East Asia. Originally based in mainland China, the Republic of China now governs the island of Taiwan, which makes up over 99% of its territory, ... Wikipedia
Population: 23,174,528 (2011)
Capital: Taipei
Dialing code: 886
Currency: New Taiwan dollar
GDP: $393.2 billion USD (2008)
National anthem: National Anthem of the Republic of China


The tragedy of being Taiwanese - Taipei Times

China’s leaders are fond of saying that “Taiwan is an inalienable part of China; sacred territory that cannot be separated from China.” This idea suffers from two fundamental flaws:

First, what exactly do they mean by inalienable? Territory changes hands. One of the main reasons this might happen is war, and territories have shifted in the periods of considerable chaos and carnage that have accompanied every dynastic change in Chinese history. The borders and territories claimed by the Qin, Han, Tang and Song dynasties were all different. So, when Chinese leaders talk about China’s inalienable territory, which dynasty exactly are they modeling this on? If you can claim a territory to be an inalienable part of your country purely on the basis of previous ownership, does that mean that Britain is justified in saying the US is an inalienable part of British territory, or that Russia could claim the same for Alaska? If that were true, anarchy would reign in the world.

Also, why would China stop with Taiwan? It could, of course, also apply the same principle to claim Vietnam and substantial swathes of Europe as its own. That really would set the cat among the pigeons. China has taken other countries’ territory as spoils of war when it has defeated them, but seems to be saying that it will not cede its own territory to sue for peace when it has been the losing party. To say that any territory is “sacred territory that cannot be separated from China” betrays either a poor knowledge of Chinese history or a willingness to lie through one’s teeth.

Second, Taiwan officially became part of Chinese territory on April 14, 1684, in the 23rd year of the reign of the Qing emperor Kangxi (康熙). Then, 211 years later, almost to the day, it was ceded, together with the Penghu Islands, to Japan in the Treaty of Shimonoseki signed on April 17, 1895.

When the Republic of China (ROC) replaced the Qing Dynasty in 1912, Taiwan was still part of Japanese territory, and so the ROC could not make any protestations to the effect that Taiwan was an inalienable part of China’s territory. With the end of World War II in 1945, the Allies set about dividing up the spoils, and on Oct. 25 of that year Chiang Kai-shek (蔣介石) sent a contingent to Taiwan to take over the administration of the island on the back of the Cairo Declaration, a document that was neither a treaty, nor an executive agreement, and which was not actually signed by anyone.

In 1949, a defeated Chiang fled with his forces to Taiwan, and the People’s Republic of China (PRC), which had defeated the ROC, took control of China. The PRC has never, not for one day, had control of Taiwan since that point in time. On Feb. 1, 1955, then-British prime minister Winston Churchill told the British parliament in no uncertain terms that he refused to hand Taiwan to Communist China, dashing the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) hopes of gaining the island.

China boasts a 5,000-year-long history, and yet it only had control of Taiwan for a relatively trifling 211 years of that time. It is hard to substantiate the claim that Taiwan’s being an inalienable part of China, as part of its sacred territory, is a historical fact.

Since Taiwan does not belong to China, and given that a nation needs to have a population, territory, a government and sovereignty to be considered a country, is it possible to call Taiwan a country? This is not an easy question to answer. Although more than half of the 23 million people who live on the island see themselves as Taiwanese, anywhere between 4 and 5 percent define themselves as Chinese, and many consider themselves to be both Taiwanese and Chinese.

As far as territory is concerned, there are those who say that the ROC owns Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu, those who would add China to this and there are still others who would also include Mongolia. There are, then, several versions of Taiwan, depending on both national identification and sovereign territory. In what way is Taiwan to ask the international community to accept its existence and give it the status of a country?

The main culprits for Taiwan’s predicament, and the confusion over its status today, are Chiang and his son and successor, former president Chiang Ching-kuo (蔣經國). The despotic rule of the island over which they presided consigned democracy in Taiwan to being hackled for four decades. Taiwanese were forced to remain silent through the Martial Law era and the White Terror, stifling language and history and taking away the population’s ability to form its own sense of right and wrong, its own sense of morality, its own values and its own sense of justice, to the extent that people no longer had the ability to turn the situation around. Even more tragic is that Taiwan has still not been able to establish itself as a country.

Given this, the US itself is also complicit in Taiwan’s plight, because of the support it consistently gave the two Chiangs. As such, it shoulders some of the moral responsibility. Ever since World War II, the US, that great bastion of global democracy, sat back and watched while Chiang and his son wreaked havoc on Taiwan, to the detriment of Taiwanese. The cumulative effect is worse than the damage done by dropping atomic bombs on Nagasaki and Hiroshima. For this alone, the US owes Taiwan fairness and justice, it owes Taiwanese assistance, it owes Taiwanese the right to self-determination.

Taiwan belongs to Taiwanese, not any other country. It certainly does not belong to China. If the 23 million people living on the island want to be Chinese, that does not mean they have to live in a world in which they are forced to forsake Taiwan and commit to China before they can be accepted as such. Taiwanese are an island people, they do not care how small Taiwan is, and they certainly do not harbor any ambition to grab territory from other countries.

Taiwan has been known for many years for its foreign exchange reserves and for having virtually eradicated illiteracy among its population, and yet it has not been able to wrest independence for itself in the post-war period.

Next time the opportunity to do so arises, it will not make the same mistake.

Today, even the South Pacific states of the Kingdom of Tonga and the Republic of Nauru are independent. Nobody is asking what Tonga or Nauru are? Yet 23 million Taiwanese are still asking themselves: What is Taiwan? Is this not the tragedy of being born Taiwanese?

Chang Kuo-tsai is a former deputy secretary-general of the Taiwan Association of University Professors and a retired associate professor of National Hsinchu University of Education.
 
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To Chinese members:

To avoid any misunderstanding here, Vietnam supports One-China policy, and officially recognises the People's Republic of China only.
 
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The tragedy of Taiwan is that many Taiwanese are really han chinese, and Twain is near China and China ruled Taiwan for a substantial time.

All these elements combined together make Taiwan an inalienable part of China
 
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I would like to hear from the Taiwanese what do they think about reunification with mainland China?
No never, or maybe, or under certain preconditions?
 
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To Chinese members:

To avoid any misunderstanding here, Vietnam supports One-China policy, and officially recognises the People's Republic of China only.


I know. Because your current interest can't afford you not to recognize PRC.

But in your deep heart, you want China to be split and weak, just judging by your posts.

Back to the topic.

I think it is indeed very sad for those Taiwanese Chinese who'd like to set an independent country. In fact, even one day they got their independence, they would be still sad as they couldn't row away their island from the mainland; and they couldn't stop speaking Chinese like Vietnamese once did; and they couldn't afford to abandon their Chinese tradition and culture or they would be animal in jungles...


Those people's life will never be happy. They are condemned to perpetual tragedy .


Pitiful guys!
 
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Taiwan is a part of land belong to all Chinese people and by that definition is a part of the Greater China and is inseparable as a whole. The CPC, KMT or DPP are merely the current ruling administrations of their respective territories and in the longer view, it's their duties to adhere to the principle of an indivisible China, otherwise they will be viewed as failures to maintain their mandates. China, historically, can only be strong when all its lands are under one control.
 
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Not a popular notion, but a true one: Your territory is where your might can reach.

Majority of people in Taiwan are of Han ancestry, and attempting to argue they're a separate culture. Even the so called "Taiwanese" language they like to tout so much is nothing more than Minnan dialect from Fujian province.

Aside from culture, Taiwan serves as part of the island chain to contain China, which must be broken. If they will no do it willingly, then some force is needed, whether military or economic in nature. Here is a historical fact about Chinese history. No unification ever occured without the use of force or the threat of force.
 
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One China policy?
Yeah there is only one China and one Taiwan.

Just kidding please do punch me.
 
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There is no misunderstanding that Taiwan is part of China. The ancestors of most Taiwanese are from China, after all they are Han Chinese. After Sun Yat Sen died Chiang Kai Shek took his place as the leader of KMT. Chiang's goal was to unify China but lost to the Communist instead. After evacuating to Taiwan, Chiang's government continued to declare its intention to retake mainland China.

Even Chiang Kai Shek wanted the people in Taiwan to unify with the mainland brothers. Taiwan knows it's impossible to defeat the Communist Party so they want to become independent. Mainland of course doesn't support this and will take military actions if they dare try announce as a separate country. Taiwan must recognize at some point in the future that they weren't the ones to unify a divided China but it was the Communist who did and that they will have to join with their mainland brothers hand in hand just like when they agreed to work together fighting the Japanese.
With the Daioyu island dispute going on their ally isn't supporting them either surely they understand that it is Mainland and Taiwan who is on the same line facing Japan supported by the US.

It is the same as North Vietnam invaded the Southern part to unify because it was originally one country. East and West Germany were divided by the iron curtain and got to unify too. Korea originally one country now split in two but still at war (technically) trying to unify.
 
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Its not tragedy for Taiwan people. They live a better life and have more rights. They can show a good example of another political system to CPC, most Mainland Chinese like Taiwan pretty much.
 
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China's control over taiwan at least started during the three kingdoms era (AD 220-280) during which kingdom Wu has controlled it.

To Chinese members:

To avoid any misunderstanding here, Vietnam supports One-China policy, and officially recognises the People's Republic of China only.
 
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I would like to hear from the Taiwanese what do they think about reunification with mainland China?
No never, or maybe, or under certain preconditions?

It's all about interests, Taiwan is like Vietnam, when China is become strong...they will consider to be part of China and value relation, when China is weak they feel resentful toward Chineses and look down at us...now China is 2nd economic power, they know how to find the way to crawl back to China to worship their ancestors and ask for family reunion. it's part of human nature, we all embrace rich and kiss even the a$$ of richer people and look down at the poors. But we certainly don't care how they think...we made an offer that they can't refuse.
 
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To Chinese members:

To avoid any misunderstanding here, Vietnam supports One-China policy, and officially recognises the People's Republic of China only.

Would Vietnam still support One China Policy when China claim Vietnam, Philippine, Hawaii also belong to China?
 
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