It is January 16, 2016, and 56-year-old Liu Tao-shan is sitting quietly in his living room in Taichung, Taiwan. The television in front of him is showing the results of Taiwan’s 14th presidential election. The Democratic Progressive Party candidate Tsai Ing-wen has beaten the Kuomintang’s Eric Chu and the People First Party’s James Soong with 6.89 million votes, marking the third time power has changed hands on the island since democratic elections were introduced in 1996.
“I feel very confused,” Liu confesses.
Liu’s father was a supporter of Chiang Kai-shek and retreated to Taiwan in 1949 after Chiang lost out to Mao Zedong’s Communist forces in the Chinese civil war. Growing up receiving a patriotic education, Liu has always believed that he is a Chinese national living temporarily on the island of Taiwan.
“I believe the Republic of China is the legitimate regime that represents China, and some day we will recover the mainland,” Liu says.
With the passage of time, however, the political and social gap widened across the Taiwan Strait. Liu admits he has been constantly forced to reconsider who he is.
“Nowadays when people speak of ‘China’, they meant the People’s Republic of China instead of the Republic of China,” Liu says. “I grew up seeing them take away the right to represent China one step at a time. I’ve been constantly thinking about this question. Now I see myself as both Chinese and Taiwanese.”

Under the military rule of Chiang’s Kuomintang, reinforcing Chinese identity was essential to its “one China” vision.
To promote Chinese nationalism, education and propaganda were used to stifle local culture and erase 50 years of Japanese colonial rule on the island. Local languages were banned in mass media or during school lessons.
“The emergence of a separate Taiwanese identity was restricted for a long time by the island’s authoritarian political system,” says Tsai Chang-yen, an Assistant Professor at National Taiwan Normal University’s Graduate Institute of Political Science.
Martial law was declared in Taiwan in 1949. Emergency powers were placed in the hands of the president and the formation of new political parties was banned. Constitutional rights relating to freedom of speech, press and assembly were denied.
Criticizing the government, discussing the notion of Taiwanese independence, or showing interest in China’s Communist party might lead to charges of sedition.
These years were known as Taiwan’s “White Terror.” Thousands were arrested, imprisoned, “disappeared,” or executed for their real or perceived opposition to the government.
Read: Thirty years on, memories of martial rule in Taiwan

Martial law was lifted in 1987 and political reforms have opened doors to more nuanced examinations of Taiwan’s modern history. Today, Taiwan is a vibrant example of a full-fledged Asian democracy, but the legacy of that authoritarian period lingers in certain aspects.
Li Wen-chi was born in 1986. He grew up in a transitional period when Taiwan was experimenting with democracy and moving out of the shadows of its authoritarian past.
“We rarely talk about politics back at home, just like every other normal Taiwanese family,” he says. “Back in the days, people avoid asking questions and giving opinions – to protect themselves. The rule still stays in my family. My political education all came from textbooks.”
Li remembers that, in elementary school, his third grade geography teacher asked him to draw “a map of our country.” “The answer includes the whole of mainland China,” Li laughs. “In textbooks, mainland China is still where we lost to the Communist Party and [the place we] will someday reclaim.”
Students only started to learn more about Taiwan’s history under the presidencies of pro-Taiwan KMT leader Lee Teng-hui (1988-2000) and DPP president Chen Shui-bian (2000-2008), and when Taiwanese history was separated from China-centered ideology and became required reading, from 1997, in the curricula of primary and secondary schools.

Against this backdrop, Li admits he grew up with rather a vague understanding of his identity.
In 2012, he went to pursue a Masters Degree in comparative literature at the University of Edinburgh. It was the first time in his life he had the opportunity to meet people from China – and also the first time he was called Chinese.
“I think meeting someone from China made me draw a line between what’s ‘us’ and what’s ’them,’” Li says. “People’s false recognition will also quickly make you understand who you really are. My Romanian room-mate presumed I’m a Chinese the first day we met. I told him no, I’m a Taiwanese.”
According to polls conducted by the Election Study Center at National Chengchi University, in recent years there has been a growth in the number of people who identify themselves as Taiwanese.
Back in 1992, only 17.6% of respondents identified themselves as Taiwanese. This figure rose to 58.2% in 2016. The number of respondents identifying themselves as exclusively Chinese was 25.5% in 1992, but fell to 3.4% in 2016.
Syaru Shirley Lin, a professor at the University of Virginia and the Chinese University of Hong Kong, has long studied the links between Taiwan’s identity and policy making. She says the shifting of identity might be due to several factors.
In the republic’s early days, identity was largely defined in terms of ethnicity, she says. “Those who had been in Taiwan before 1949 were the Taiwanese, and those who came after 1949 were the Chinese,” Lin explains. “But in the past 30 years, the term Taiwanese has gradually diminished its ethnic tone, and expanded into discussions based on values and way of life.”
For younger generations, the questions of “whether I am a Chinese or a Taiwanese” is “simply not applicable anymore.” “They just naturally consider themselves as Taiwanese,” Lin says.
In a 2013 study by Academia Sinica, more than 90% of people aged under 34 identified themselves as exclusively Taiwanese.
Events have provided a further stimulus. People who identify as Taiwanese increased, from 2008, under the administration of the pro-China Ma Ying-jeou. “People think Ma didn’t prioritize Taiwan’s interests,” Lin says. “That posed a threat to Taiwan’s values, thus giving rise to the Taiwan identity.”

Lien Chen-jie was born in 1996, the year Taiwan held its first direct presidential election. He has considered himself Taiwanese ever since he can remember, he says.
But Lien’s exploration of his identity doesn’t stop there and he has been active in expressing it via politics.
In 2014, students and civic groups occupied Taiwan’s Legislative Yuan and, later, its Executive Yuan to protest against a trade pact with China. Later known as the Sunflower Movement, protestors believe that the economic benefits offered by closer ties with China pose a serious threat to Taiwan’s political future.
“I started to read comments and debates on the Internet, some of which were very local centric,” Lien said. “It was a turning point for me. I became convinced that the Republic of China is also a foreign regime. It doesn’t equal to and should not represent Taiwan. I hope that Taiwan can decolonize from the Republic of China and be independent as soon as possible.”

Born in 1990, Jay Lin has a similar background to Lien’s. While identifying himself as a Taiwanese, however, he considers the debate over independence a false one, branding it an “impossible” aim.
“If we are to completely remove ties with China, we still need to depend on other powerful nations, like Japan or the United States,” he says. “This isn’t true independence.”
Lin says Taiwan has always been a multicultural society and has always accommodated people from different places. To discuss “who are the Taiwanese?” means abandoning that tradition, he believes.
“Can we be an inclusive society that welcomes everyone and respects every culture and history? This is my imagination of the future.“

China’s claim on Taiwan is unilateral and is comparable to Germany claiming the entire Austria, UK claiming the entire Ireland, or Russia claiming the entire Ukraine. China was already unified in 1949.
Zheng He It’d be a fantasy to talk about China in a way one would talk about a member of the US. China is a non-democratic communist soveringn country, and There is no federal relation between Taiwan and China. And there is no suprme court of China to administer Chinese law over Taiwan. Chinese law does not extend over to Taiwan. No law China issues is enforceable in Taiwan.
Ken Nguyen Forced migration is a matter of fact, you can easily see that from the integration policies operated bejing to mix the cultures and the ethnies. The second policy you are mentioning is an idiocy, considering that the trend is totally the opposite, and the CCP has no interest in the countrysides. In conclusion, the chinese literature you are bullshitting about, is entirely propaganda BS! I had the luck to talk with some Uighurs, they told me things to bleack your hair white!
Taiwanese constitution order excludes China. That’s just the way it is and there is no workaround. If Russia is at war with China and occupies a part of China, Taiwan is not at war with Russia. By the rule of law Taiwan’s territory does not overlap with China. Two completely separate states. The fact that China claim Taiwan does not change the fact on the ground. If you loose a court case in Taiwan, there is no supreme court of China that you can appeal to.
Identifying themselves as East Germans or West Germans does not prevent them from unifying into one single country, which made them stronger, and stopped being two antagonizing entities. The end result of unification is a peaceful and stronger country that is good for both sides involved, and good for the world.
How many East Germans considered themselves West Germans, or vice versa, before the German Unification? Isn’t that obvious given that two have been separated all these years? It’s like asking people whether they want to pay tax or not.
Historically Taiwan/Formosa is part of mainland China. Today, politically speaking they are two countries.
Only your geen party survey says so. Look at the graph above over 50% still identifies themselves as Chinese and as Taiwanese as well.
We all know the green party has been working extra hard and desparately trying to change Taiwan’s history textbook for schools and making up history on the origin of Taiwanese to dissociateing and desinicize the deep Chinese historical, cultural root in Taiwan. All such attempts will not bring any benefit or bring about Independence for Taiwan. but will only be an obsticle and a disadvantage.
In the case of a legal dispute even in the US there are differences in law where one state law will not apply on another state.
In the example of war. Technically the civil war between Communist and Kuomingtong has not ended and this will have to be settle sooner or later
and how will it be settled depends on the wisdom of the Chinese on two side of the stait.
Vidar Vollund , Agree, can’t argue about that. So are the same in all parts of China. When a Chinese introduces himself to an outsiders first he will say he is a Chinese followered by which part of China he comes from. It’s normal and common.
To those of you who don’t agree my point of view about : Taiwan is not part of China", I trust you might have your point of views. But that did not change the status that right now Taiwan is not part of China. To those of you who want me to join the Taiwan military or change my name or to declair that I am not Chinese, these are very strange ideas. I might think about it for they are not bad ideas.
A very simple objective reality check is to run this test case: "if you have a legal dispute with Taiwan or a Taiwanese person, are you able to get the ultimate compensation from appealing to China’s law? Can China compensate you for your grievance or loss you claim against Taiwan?" If the answer is no, then you know Taiwan is not a province of China. The second litmus test to test soverignty is to consider a scenario where if your coutry enters into a war with China. In the case your country is at war with China, you ask if your country is automatically at war with Taiwan. If the answer is still no, then you know China and Taiwan belong to two separate soverigns (i.e, they are not the same soverign) .
林台生 "ROC" or "Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan Penghu Kinmen and Matsu" are the respective demostic and international legal names of aninstitution under Taiwanese authorization. The ROC institution is fully owned and controlled by Taiwan, and Taiwan is the collective Taiwanese.
TAIWAN IS NOT PART OF CHINA!! GOD SAVE TAIWAN FROM THE COMMUNIST THUGS
Germany was divided by the cold war into two political enties, and later got united again. Why not China.
Zheng He Taiwan has been seperated from mainland in more than 100 years,with the exception of the years 1945-49. A long time seperation between areas makes the parts to develope their own identity like between UK and Australia,France and Quebec etc.Taiwan has their own identity which is chinese but also taiwanese.
The germans live in four countries,Germany,Austria,Switzerland and Lichtenstein.Why could not the chinese live in two countries?
The survey shows the dwindling of Chinese "politial identiy" in the past 30 years. But the underlying ethnic identity has always been Taiwanese due to the force of nature, namely geography.The underlying Taiwanese identity has always been the major and stable force regardless of various political envirnoment that come and go.
Taiwan and China are different geographically, historically, linguistically and politically. Migrants from China never exceeded local Taiwanese population at any given time throughout human history. They are assimilated into the local population by intermarriage. Like other asian countries such as Japan, Korea nad Vietnam, Taiwan is heavily influenced by Chinese culture. Acutally Japan, Korea and Vietnam are more Chinese in the classical sense than Taiwan is, due to these three countries having longer contact with and exposure to China for more than a millennium.
Matteo Ternelli How and where did you get the idea that Beijing forced Han people to migrate to such regions? You also contradict yourself. If Beijing had forced people to migrate to such regions, Han people will definitely be the majority now in these regions.
Young chinese went sent to the countryside to alleviate population pressures in the cities, help develop the land and significant numbers chose to remain in these regions when this unpopular policy was dropped.
These are many accounts of life in these regions in Chinese literature. Get an education and read up before you throw accusations at Beijing.