Escape from Taiwan: Legacy of Oppression
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About this ebook
During the late 1960s through the early and mid-1970s, Chinese immigration into the United States came almost exclusively from Taiwan. They arrived on American shores to flee the regime of a dictator who used murder, brutality, and fear to stay in power and quell any political or social dissent.
While that generation of Taiwanese may have found refuge in the United States, many still never felt truly safe. In Escape from Taiwan, Chiufang Hwang recounts how the political oppression her parents experienced remained a constant specter during her own childhood, both because of her parents’ paranoia and their involvement in secret Taiwanese expat pro-democracy organizations.
“My parents moved to the United States in the late 1960s when I was a toddler. Even though I grew up in this country, I was raised by people whose outlook was informed by fear and oppression, and they did their best to instill in me the dangers of speaking out—about anything. For me and other children of Taiwanese immigrants, their legacy of oppression became ours by default, and impacted our efforts to assimilate, both as children and adults, to our adopted country.”
Part memoir, part family history, Escape from Taiwan recounts Chiufang’s journey to understand the historical events that informed her upbringing, and how in the process it gave her a greater appreciation for the ideals represented by the Statue of Liberty to generations of immigrants.
Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses, yearning to breathe free ...
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door.
Chiufang Hwang
Dr. Chiufang Hwang lives in Dallas, Texas, and is in the process of finishing her next two book projects: Grown-Up Child and Journey from Taiwan.
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Escape from Taiwan - Chiufang Hwang
PREFACE
The United States is a country of immigrants. Unless you’re Native American, your family came here across some ocean at some point during the last few hundred years. The European cultures have been well documented, from the Pilgrims escaping religious persecution to the Irish fleeing the potato famine. But not much has been written about the Asian immigrant experience in general or the Taiwanese community in particular.
The first incarnation of this book was a planned scholarly psychological case study of American-raised daughters of Taiwanese immigrants. But upon reflection, I realized presenting the experience I lived first-hand in a dispassionate, academic presentation would do the story I wanted to tell—not to mention the readers—a disservice. I want to tell the story of people, not subjects. I think the more we understand about other ethnicities, cultures, and nationalities, the more empathy we’ll have and perhaps the better we can coexist.
Taiwanese people in general and Taiwanese immigrants in particular tend to be very private, insular, and emotionally reserved. It might be a stereotype, but it also happens to be a very real cultural trait. As a rule, no matter how turbulent our lives are, we maintain tranquil appearances. Our parents were raised to be very secretive, even with their closest friends. And that instinct to fly under the radar and not cause waves was borne from an ingrained fear passed down through many generations, the legacy of living under an oppressive regime that ruled with brutality, where vocal dissent could be fatal.
Many Taiwanese who came to the United States in the last half of the twentieth century, still looked over their shoulder, careful to keep their political opinions about the ruling party in Taiwan to themselves, fearful of possible consequences. For those born and bred in the United States I’m sure it sounds paranoid, something out of a John Le Carré spy novel. Usually the biggest threat Americans face for criticizing their current government is an argument during Thanksgiving dinner. But if you think authoritarian powers-that-be aren’t dangerous, just consider the number of ex-pat Russian dissidents who have ended up poisoned in the past decades, including the March 4, 2018, attack in England on a former Russian spy, Sergei Skripal, and his daughter with military grade nerve agent.
Taiwan’s totalitarian government carried out several suspected hits of their own over the years but they mostly controlled their ex-pats by holding relatives in Taiwan accountable. If you wanted your parents to keep their jobs or didn’t want Uncle to disappear, you avoided doing anything that could bring unwanted attention, keeping your political opinions to yourself regardless of where you were in the world.
And we’re not talking ancient history here. Martial law did not end in Taiwan until 1987; the first free—and fair—elections took place in 1992; and the first fully democratic presidential election was held in 1996. My parents moved to the United States in the late 1960s so even though I grew up in this country, I was raised by people whose outlook was informed by fear and oppression, and they did their best to instill in me the dangers of speaking out—about anything. My mother especially kept me on a very short leash even when I was in college, not wanting me to have a social life outside their small circle of other Taiwanese families because you never knew who might be spying on you. She clung tightly to all things Taiwan, from the food she cooked to her refusal to learn English to not wanting me to blend in with American kids and dressing me in traditional Chinese styles when I was younger. While it may have been her security blanket and made her feel closer to those she left behind, it made for a lot of childhood confusion and teenage resentment from me. It wasn’t until I was older that I discovered the daughters in the other Taiwanese families I’d grown up around had also all gone through the same emotional and cultural struggle to find their identity, which affected our efforts to assimilate at school, in our neighborhoods, and with our peers when we were younger. It also created conflicts, both internal and familial, as we became adults. Leaving the nest is a rite of passage all teens and young adults go through. It’s made more complicated when your parents see your rejection of their Old World customs as not just a rejection of them but of your heritage.
Much to my mother’s chagrin, I had an independent streak that was decidedly American. I was also ambitious. There were not enough spies in the world to keep me from going to medical school and being a success. I also made life choices I knew my parents wouldn’t approve of—like getting engaged without asking their permission—because I wasn’t willing to sublimate my life and goals just to make them happy or abide by quaint customs. It’s not that I didn’t respect the cultural traditions my parents embraced, but they were designed for a different place and time. They simply didn’t apply to my life in Texas. It’s a fine line many first-generation children of immigrants constantly walk. I was willing to endure my parents’ occasional disappointment for not being traditional enough or dutiful to their wishes. But not all my Taiwanese friends were, so we ended up taking very different paths in life.
But regardless of where we ended up, we were all products of the generations that came before us in our family trees. We may not have lived under Japanese occupation in the 1800s or totalitarian Chinese rule after World War II, but those events shaped the people our grandparents were, who in turn shaped our parents who in turn influenced who we became, either by acquiescence or rebellion. Their legacy is ours by default, but that doesn’t mean we can’t change the narrative. For Taiwanese immigrants, instead of teaching fear, we can instill hope. Instead of being socially isolated and insular, we can encourage inclusion and show the benefit of diversity. Instead of watching from afar in silence, we can support those in Taiwan who seek to maintain democracy.
The original purpose of this book was to tell the story about the immigrant experience of my people. But I now realize that at its heart it’s also about the human experience of figuring out who you are, where you belong, reconciling your parent’s past with your own present, and deciding what you want to add to your family’s legacy for the generations that follow.
In other words, it’s the story of us all.
INTRODUCTION
While frowned on today, scaring children into compliance has probably been a tried and true parental strategy since Cain and Abel were bickering at bedtime. Sometime during the Middle Ages, probably in the Scottish Highlands, misbehaving children were told a monster called the bogeyman would take them away, never to be seen again. The bogeyman would have staying power.
Fast forward several centuries and today it refers to any frightening, faceless threat. For Taiwanese children in the United States, the bogeyman was the Kuomintang, or KMT, the authoritarian political party ruling Taiwan. It was well-known that they had spies everywhere who would report any subversive activity back to the regime and get paid for their patriotism. These reports, true or not, could cause problems for family members still on the island. Many of the spies were Taiwanese students, so my father was always careful when at school.
I grew up hearing about the KMT. While American kids were taught not to talk to strangers, Taiwanese kids were warned against talking to anyone because your neighbor or teacher could be a spy. It was like living under a constant overcast sky, hoping it wouldn’t rain. When the storm finally came, it caught us completely off guard.
Looking back, I realize my mother was a bit of a stage mom. And let’s face it; I’ve never been shy about performing, so I didn’t mind. Back in Taiwan my mother had worked as an elementary school teacher, and it was common for classes to put on skits. When a holiday was coming up, the teacher would pick a theme and direct a performance that usually included some simple dance steps, costumes, and props.
I made my performing debut when I was five during my graduation from Henley Homes kindergarten. The school had given my mother permission to stage some entertainment. My mother was a capable enough choreographer; she had taken some ballet classes at a studio for a while, so she borrowed from that for the dance moves. But she did have a sharp fashion sense. She came from a wealthy family and had been a clothes horse as a young woman before getting married to my father. And she knew how to sew, so my costumes were always Chinese in style. My mother acted out the performance, and I memorized her moves. Soon enough it was show time.
My classmates were milling about, waiting for the show to start. All of the black kids were formally decked out in three-piece suits and party dresses. The few white kids were wearing everyday clothes. But I really stood out in my improvised ballet costume. I was wearing a white tulle tutu, white tights, a white T-shirt sewn onto the homemade skirt, and white bedroom slippers as ballet shoes.
The kids, their parents, and the teachers gathered together, and my mother started the music from the ballet Swan Lake, my cue to strike a pose. Then I launched into the performance. The song was a good five minutes, which feels like a really long time when you’re in front of an audience. By yourself. Twirling, waving my arms, and prancing. When the song was (mercifully) over, I bowed to everyone. The applause gave me a thrill, a validation that made me feel both shy and pleased.
After that I started performing a few times a year— on Chinese New Year, during summer get-togethers, in September for the Autumn Moon Festival, and over the Christmas holidays.
I was a six-year-old second-grader when I first danced for the Chinese Student Association on Chinese New Year at the University of South Carolina in Columbia, where my father was in a doctorate program. A bunch of students rented a place for a potluck celebration. That night there was a jovial atmosphere, and eventually it was time for my performance. As usual, it was only me. The other kids were off playing in another room. To celebrate the holiday I did the plate dance, which is exactly what it sounds like. You dance around waving plates in the air. Or in my case paper plates wrapped in tin foil to make them shiny under the lights as I waved them around. I was costumed in a lavender nightgown decorated with sequins to make it festive and a floral headband. My mother had added just a touch of makeup: a dusting of face powder, some eyeliner to make my eyes look bigger, her red lipstick on my lips, and a little rubbed on my cheeks. In Chinese culture the color red is believed to bring good luck, so the lipstick represented good fortune for the new year.
People watched politely although I’m sure the college students in attendance couldn’t have cared less about a little kid prancing around on stage doing a folk dance. When my performance was over, everyone watching applauded, I took a bow, then ran off to join the other children. It was a good evening all around, getting the new year off to a good start.
That optimism lasted a couple of days until we got an anonymous letter in the mail, written in Chinese. My mother looked stricken and read it out loud.
How dare you put bright-red lipstick on such a young child? She looked like a cocktail lady at the bar in a nightclub. That was something that a sleazy lady would wear. Such red lipstick on a young child is not appropriate. What are you trying to do to your daughter? She looks like a tramp.
I’d later learn that was code for