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A Taste of Freedom: Memoirs of a Taiwanese Independence Leader

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Peng Ming-min was imprisoned by the Kuomintang regime in Taiwan during the White Terror era for subversion. He was released from prison but still under house arrest when he evaded his minders and fled the country, first to Sweden and then to the US, where he led the fight for democracy in his homeland. He returned to stand as a candidate in the first democratic presidential elections in 1996. A Taste of Freedom is his incredible story.

234 pages, ebook

Published June 1, 2017

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
626 reviews10 followers
October 16, 2020
Peng Ming-Min is one of Taiwan’s most notable “symbols of Formosan resistance to the Nationalist Chinese occupying authorities and the articular spokesman for the Formosan interest.”

This memoir covers the period of Professor Peng’s life from childhood until 1970, when he made a bold escape from Taiwan to Sweden, to seek political amnesty, and later onto a career at the University of Michigan: his education in Japan, his efforts to restart National Taiwan University (NTU) after the retrocession of Taiwan to the Republic of China, research positions at McGill University and at the University of Paris, his appointment at NTU, early promotions and ultimately chair of the Department of Political Science. Up to this point in his life he has been apolitical; his research focused on a new area of international aviation law, he was one of the early researchers.

With his rise in stature came the situation where he was often the only (token) Formosan in the Chinese dominated government. After serving on a committee at the UN, he felt he needed to speak out, and gradually began to do that. In 1964 he was arrested for co-authoring a “Declaration of Formosan Self-salvation” (later referred to as a Declaration of Formosan independence) with two other individuals. He went through interrogation, was charged with “an attempt to overthrow the government by illegal means,” went to a mock trial, and was convicted, with a sentence of eight years.

Because he was a well-known international figure, international pressure was put on the government, which led to an early release in November 1965. While he could stay at home, the minute he left, he was watched constantly.

He determined that he could not live that way, and with very close friends and colleagues, devise an escape from Taiwan, successfully. Only after he arrived in Sweden did the Republic of China government know about it. The details are missing in this memoir, published in 1972, to protect those who helped him escape, still living in Taiwan, under martial law.

This part of the story is contained in the first 10 chapters. In the final chapter (11) he lays out his case for the self-determination by the Taiwanese people of their future. They had no choice when given up to Japan in 1895; they had no voice when given back to China after the end of World War II.

Chapter 11 is worth reading. When reading it, I kept thinking that these arguments now are 50 years old, likely older. Yet still relevant.

Amazingly Professor Peng is still alive at age 97.

It is an important contribution to understanding the events in Taiwan from 1930 to 1960s, to observing the transformation of an individual of principle to become a symbol of resistance, and for the articulation of the case of self determination for Taiwan today.
381 reviews7 followers
December 20, 2022
Absolutely amazing

The events of 2022 has put a spotlight on the situation of the Taiwan, and its relationship with the People’s Republic of China. However, very little attention has ever been paid to the native people or Taiwan, or of Formosa, as Dr Peng refers to it in his book. Although times have moved on since the book was written, it remains topical and highlights many of the anomalies that govern the life of what is now a vibrant democracy. Not least of the fact that there is no legal basis for the Chinese claim to the island. Strongly recommended reading for levels of freedom and the right to self-determination.
Profile Image for Pei-jean Lu.
316 reviews1 follower
June 5, 2022
I had never heard of Peng Ming-min until I learned of his death earlier this year. As a Taiwanese, it would be remiss of me to not learn more about a man who is considered a leader in Taiwan’s struggle for independence.
This is the book I had been wanting to read for so long as I completely identify with his own struggles as a native born Formosan (Taiwanese) in a word dominated by the politics of a regime that is filled with mainlanders that harboured a desire to ‘return’ Taiwan to the mainland.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Rhys Milling.
30 reviews
May 5, 2025
A unique perspective on Taiwan, which tells the personal story and the history of the country
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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