China Daily Global Weekly

In their grandfathe­r’s footsteps

Taiwan siblings trace their family tree to embrace opportunit­ies old and new

- By ZHANG YI zhangyi1@chinadaily.com.cn

Thanks to a copy of their family tree belonging to their late grandfathe­r, a young man from Taiwan — Lin Yen-chen — and his brother and sister were able to track down their mainland relatives.

The three siblings crossed the Taiwan Strait to trace their family’s origins, and are now studying at Peking University, a long-held wish of their grandfathe­r’s that he did not live to see come true. “I wanted to follow in my grandfathe­r’s footsteps to see the places that had a place in his heart,” said 31-year-old Lin, a doctoral student at Peking University’s School of Internatio­nal Studies.

His younger brother Lin Kuan-ting, 29, also a doctoral student at the same school, said: “Our grandfathe­r always cared for the motherland. He taught us to study hard and to serve the motherland.”

Born and brought up in Taipei in the 1990s, their childhood memories of their grandfathe­r Lin Wen-fang, who passed away in 2005, was of an elderly man with gray hair who was always writing letters to mainland relatives.

Lin Wen-fang was born in the 1920s in a prestigiou­s family in Putian in Fujian, the closest mainland province to Taiwan. The Lin family places great emphasis on education and the family tree contains many scholars. The family motto is: “Study hard and serve the motherland”.

After graduating from the best high school in Putian, Lin Wen-fang enrolled at Shanghai’s Fudan University in 1947, but left for Taiwan during the summer vacation that year to visit his sister.

That trip changed his destiny. For various reasons, including the founding of New China in 1949 and tensions across the Taiwan Strait, Lin Wen-fang was unable to return to the mainland until the late 1980s. He had

to settle down in Taiwan and start a new life with only the luggage he had with him.

Lin Wen-fang enrolled at the National Taiwan University and after graduating became a teacher. At college he participat­ed in patriotic movements in Taiwan. Although he married in Taiwan and started his own family, he never forgot his family on the other side of the Strait.

The two sides of the Taiwan Strait share the same roots, and it is estimated that up to 80 percent of Taiwan residents have connection­s to Fujian as the result of several large-scale historical migrations.

Since the end of the 1980s, when people from both sides were once again able to visit each other, millions have traveled from Taiwan to the mainland in search of their origins. As contact was lost over the years, many people had to rely on family genealogy records to find their mainland relatives.

Lin Yen-chen’s grandfathe­r was among those who crossed the Strait to find their families in the late 1980s.

He said his favorite picture of his grandfathe­r was taken during the first family reunion in Fujian. “My grandfathe­r looks like the happiest in the group photo because he has finally been reunited with his family,” he said.

Their grandfathe­r’s attachment to the mainland greatly influenced the three young Lins. While at college in Taiwan, they visited the mainland as exchange students. The elder brother chose Fudan University because of his grandfathe­r’s connection to the institutio­n.

“I wanted to visit the university where my grandfathe­r had been enrolled,” he said. The experience also helped him understand why Lin Wenfang had thought constantly about the mainland.

Younger brother Lin Kuan-ting said that from the beginning, the family knew very well where its roots were. “As we are Chinese, we also dreamed of studying at Peking University,” he said of the learning institute considered by many to be the best university in China.

The exchange programs encouraged the three Lins to pursue their educations on the mainland and they were all eventually admitted to Peking University.

Their grandfathe­r had also hoped that his grandchild­ren would return to his hometown of Putian one day. With help from the Fujian Federation of Taiwan Compatriot­s, they were able to find their relatives, thanks to a copy of the family’s genealogy they had been given.

When their grandfathe­r made a second visit to Putian, his relatives gave him a copy of his page of the family tree to take back to Taiwan. He kept it safe and passed it down to his grandchild­ren.

Recalling his first meeting with the three siblings in 2021, their uncle, Lin Shouping, who lives in Putian, said: “I knew they would come back. I was very excited to see my uncle’s descendant­s finally.”

The 67-year-old said that he and his wife wore red especially for the occasion, a custom that marks a joyous event.

“I felt no sense of distance between us,” said the siblings’ cousin, 37-yearold Lin Shaodan. “I was surprised that we looked alike.”

Lin Pei-ying, the younger sister, said she was nervous before traveling to Putian, but after meeting her relatives, she felt at home.

“We are all one family. We share a natural emotional connection,” said the 24-year-old Peking University graduate student.

“It was heartwarmi­ng. Having relatives in Fujian gives us support and people to rely on,” Lin Pei-ying added.

The siblings were invited to spend Spring Festival with their relatives if they were unable to return to Taiwan during the pandemic.

The three Lins said they were impressed by the depth of belief in the sea goddess Mazu. The belief is widely shared in both Fujian and Taiwan, and Putian is believed to be the birthplace of the goddess.

It was also interestin­g to learn that the goddess statues in Putian and Taiwan face each other across the Straits, they said. “Knowing that the two statues look at each other across the sea, I became emotional. The connection is moving,” Lin Pei-ying said.

“I want to become a civil servant on the mainland and dedicate myself to grassroots work” after graduation, said the younger brother, Lin Kuanting.

Lin Pei-ying said she hopes to participat­e in more cross-Strait exchanges, and help people from Taiwan to integrate with the mainland and learn about it.

The oldest brother, Lin Yen-chen, also said he aims to “participat­e in cross-Strait affairs, and help my compatriot­s in need”.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Three siblings from Taiwan, Lin Yen-chen (left), Lin Pei-ying (middle) and Lin Kuan-ting, show a photo of their late grandfathe­r Lin Wen-fang, at Peking University in Beijing.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Three siblings from Taiwan, Lin Yen-chen (left), Lin Pei-ying (middle) and Lin Kuan-ting, show a photo of their late grandfathe­r Lin Wen-fang, at Peking University in Beijing.

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