National Post (National Edition)

Indigenous Tao lifestyle threatened on island off Taiwan

Taiwanese urged to vacation at home during pandemic

- SALLY JENSEN

• While 2020 will be remembered by many as a year of travel bans and cancelled vacations, the indigenous Tao people of Orchid Island will remember it as the year unpreceden­ted numbers of visitors descended on their once tranquil home.

The small island, 90 kilometres off Taiwan's southeast coast, is home to approximat­ely 4,700 ethnic Austronesi­an Tao or Yami people, and has in recent years become a popular holiday destinatio­n for both Taiwanese and foreigners alike.

But with bans on internatio­nal travel due to the pandemic, this year Orchid Island has experience­d an unexpected surge in domestic visitors to more than 220,000 — putting a strain on both its natural resources and its inhabitant­s.

A community whose livelihood revolves around fishing, anthropolo­gists believe the Tao people migrated to Orchid Island from Batan Island in the northern Philippine­s around 800 years ago.

They have their own language and belief system, as well as customs such as tatala boatbuildi­ng, undergroun­d houses and taro cultivatio­n.

Since 1982, Orchid Island has also housed a nuclear-waste facility, which has drawn strong opposition and protests from Tao locals.

The Taiwan government has enforced tight measures to curb the spread of COVID-19, resulting in only 550 cases and seven deaths.

Taiwan encouraged the country's nearly 24 million population, roughly equivalent to Australia's, to spend the summer vacation within the country's borders in order to bolster the economy, offering travel subsidies and discounts.

On many days during the summer, ferries to Orchid Island, as well as accommodat­ion on the island, were completely booked.

Many Tao islanders are now engaged in the seasonal tourism industry, working as scuba instructor­s, hoteliers, restaurate­urs and guides.

However, with 82,000 visitors over July and August alone, the 45-sq.-km island's traditiona­l Tao way of life and ecological balance have been pushed to the brink.

“Here it used to be so beautiful and clean, but the whole place has become a sewage plant,” says Lu Mai of the Orchid Island Youth Action Alliance.

To cope with the amount of trash produced on the island over the summer, hoteliers launched a “take home one kilogram per person” scheme aimed at tourists.

The township office similarly initiated a donation scheme of US$7 per visitor to help with the cost of transporti­ng garbage back to the mainland.

But much of what is picked up on the coasts has floated across the sea from countries such as China, Vietnam and Hong Kong.

For the past seven years, Tao men have organized and undertaken an annual ocean cleanup scheme funded by Taiwan's Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

As well as litter and pollution, the increasing presence of Taiwanese fishing trawlers frustrates local volunteers, many of whom are small-scale fishermen.

Climate change is another factor damaging the marine environmen­t on which the Tao rely.

This year, Taiwan did not experience

a single typhoon — which play an important role in preventing damaging sea temperatur­e rise — for the first time since 1964.

And this summer's warmth caused Taiwan's worst coral bleaching event in 22 years, according to Greenpeace Taiwan.

“The temperatur­e at these depths (30 metres) has never been so high, so the reef looks bad,” says Ya Ken, a scuba instructor and cleanup volunteer.

The coral bleaching affects both tourism and fish stocks.

Tao people are concerned that if the combined pressures from tourism and climate change worsen, their ways of life — traditiona­l and modern — will be affected.

According to locals, “approximat­ely half” of Orchid's Tao people now live and work seasonally in mainland Taiwanese cities where they find better economic opportunit­ies.

This has led to an exodus of young people from Orchid Island, and a workforce shortage during the off-season.

“Young men used to help construct undergroun­d houses and build their tatala as a rite of passage,” Ah Shan, a local handyman, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“The women took care of agricultur­e and food production. Now, nobody cares because there's no money in it — unless it's for tourists.”

Sheng An, head of the Ivalini tribe, said that “now you can barely see the ocean for all the concrete. Islanders themselves have built it like this, completely unharmoniz­ed … this tourism developmen­t has eroded our culture.”

Some Tao people are calling for limits to be placed on visitor numbers.

“We have had discussion­s internally and with the township office,” said Liu Shu-hao from the tourism department of the Taitung County government, “but (a tourist limit) is not something we would implement right now.”

Some Tao people feel they have been let down by government bureaucrac­y.

“The government bodies are too idealistic,” said one tour guide. “They think we have time to pick up trash from the ocean. This year, our men are too busy running business on the island, taking tourists around. Who is going to miss a day of wages to look after the land?”

Liu added: “It's difficult to explain. The Tao culture is different, so we sort of let them manage tourism on Orchid Island their own way.”

NOW YOU CAN BARELY SEE THE OCEAN FOR ALL THE CONCRETE.

 ?? SAM YEH / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Orchid Island is home to approximat­ely 4,700 ethnic Austronesi­an Tao or Yami people, and has in recent years
become a popular holiday destinatio­n for both Taiwanese and foreigners alike.
SAM YEH / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES Orchid Island is home to approximat­ely 4,700 ethnic Austronesi­an Tao or Yami people, and has in recent years become a popular holiday destinatio­n for both Taiwanese and foreigners alike.

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