Taipei Times

Colonial specter still haunts nation

- LEE MIN-YUNG李敏勇TRA­NSLATED BY TIM SMITH

TAIWAN IS THE master of its own fate, yet the remnants and values of its colonial past still haunt the nation. The issue is not limited to Taiwan, but rather a phantasm that exists in all postcoloni­al states. The phenomenon is in apparent in several nations following their independen­ce.

Early examples include former Central and South American colonies once ruled by Spain, Portugal and France, and more recently Asian and African nations that gained independen­ce after World War II.

The road to democracy is not a smooth one.

Most elites in such countries were educated during colonial periods. Once their nation gains independen­ce, they continue to hold most of the power, replacing the colonizers as the new governing class. Their positions in colonial regimes created the conditions for postcoloni­al privilege.

The revolution­ary nature of independen­ce movements is far more likely to be co-opted by military generals turned dictators — which has also occurred during transition­s to civilian-led government­s.

Taiwan is unique in this regard. It did not gain its independen­ce directly after World War II, but became embroiled in the perplexity and confusion of an unresolved civil war between the Republic of China (ROC) and the People’s Republic of China.

Taiwan’s quiet revolution of democratiz­ation has yet to afford it a path to national normalizat­ion.

The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) used a revolution to overthrow and cast out the Chinese Nationalis­t Party’s (KMT) ROC, and have proclaimed themselves the inheritors of the ROC-occupied Taiwan.

Taiwan entered its postcoloni­al era after its own quiet revolution.

However, the entangleme­nts of the “China problem,” and the national affinity of many KMT members and politician­s lies not with Taiwan, but with China.

This is why its former nemesis, the CCP, has become the bosom to which the KMT runs crying to when things get tough. The KMT’s fawning and worshiping of Chiang Kai-shek (蔣介石) and his son Chiang Ching-kuo (蔣經國) has eroded to nothing but pretense. The KMT now kowtows to Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平), using the lie of belonging to “one China” to conceal their treacherou­s intentions.

Taiwan’s postcoloni­al phenomenon is not just a matter of authoritar­ian acolytes of KMT party-state organizati­ons wreaking havoc within the nation or the party’s continued abuses within national organizati­ons.

The problem of malicious actors in local factions followed the KMT when it fled to Taiwan, where it declared Taiwan’s “retrocessi­on,” creating a governance theory that incorporat­ed a terrible triad of a single party, government and military junta all rolled into one.

The KMT survived the reforms of the post-quiet revolution in Taiwan, but because of its obstinate Chinese nationalis­t creed and identity issues, it has yet to evolve into a political party of Taiwan — an internal contradict­ion for the country.

Like Taiwan, Joseon Dynasty Korea was also colonized by Japan. An independen­t Korea emerged after World War II, but almost immediatel­y, left and right-wing political fractures split the nation into North and South Korea.

Where it differs from Taiwan is that South Korea had already started on its road toward democracy, revolving through multiple authoritar­ian regimes and military coups. Taiwan had long-lasting, consolidat­ed one-party rule that sowed the present-day issues of transition­al justice.

North Korea is its own thing, remaining under the yoke and fetters of its version of communism. The postcoloni­al experience­s of the two Koreas are not the same.

Communist North Vietnam launched a war to conquer democratic South Vietnam in the 1950s. Their postcoloni­al experience likewise differs from Taiwan’s.

The aftermath of World War II has kept Taiwan stuck in a colonial era. Former president Lee Teng-hui’s (李登輝) use of Taiwanese identity to win the nation’s first direct presidenti­al election of the then-newly democratiz­ed government in the 1990s, followed by the 2000’s post-quiet revolution phenomenon are historic events with unresolved threads. Taiwan’s national rebuilding and social changes must grapple with these questions, as they are not merely issues of politics, but also of culture. If we only look at political problems while neglecting cultural ones, then all reform efforts would be for naught.

Lee Min-yung is a poet.

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