Taiwan
Zhongzheng Qiao

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    • Day 148

      Taipei-Keelung, Taiwan Eve TEMPLE- 3of3

      June 11, 2023 in Taiwan ⋅ 🌧 81 °F

      In the middle of the market was a beautiful Dianji (Holy King) Temple (see the warrior on the horse out front) in the middle of the craziness. The Dianji Temple was built in 1873, and is the biggest Temple in Keelung City. People worship Kaichang Holy King (and other Gods) here since the ancient people of Keelung mostly came from Min Nan. Sometimes outdoor performers and other entertainers perform near the temple as well. Note: the small divining blocks. We watched as people prayed with these block many time over the time we visited this Temple and others. The half-moon shaped blocks are made of wood or bamboo root and are known in the Hokkien dialect in Taiwan as bwa bwey.

      The person looking for guidance or answers to questions from the Gods, waits until both crescents have come to a standstill before deciphering and recording the information that has been delivered. He/she then says out loud what the Gods have communicated. It is then repeated over and over in a rhythmic pattern. When the blocks have fallen with the flat surface down, it indicates the God’s dissatisfaction or disagreement with the question posed. If the crescents land with one flat side and one rounded side up, then the response is considered positive, or affirmative. The third combination, both blocks fall with the rounded side positioned down, meaning the “gods are laughing” and their advice is inconclusive. Often, the process goes on for a long time. Very intense (and interesting) to watch as people pray to the Gods and wait intently for an answer.
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    • Day 148

      Taipei, Taiwan - LIBERTY SQUARE 1 of 2

      June 11, 2023 in Taiwan ⋅ 🌧 81 °F

      Taiwan with a population of 24 million, is a country with a strong Chinese cultural background that is very traditional (family oriented) but also is a country that in many ways is still trying to find itself (see our writeup on Kaohsiung, Taiwan for background).

      Although social classes do not exist in the traditional sense it does through education distinctions, making up the various “classes” – beginning with scholars, peasants, workers, merchants and then soldiers (except when at war when they are elevated).

      Sun Yat-Sen was a revolutionary and believed that China should be a republic run by the people and become a modern competitive nation (and look at where we are today). He is honored with a memorial at the entrance of the National Palace Museum but “the credit” for modern Taiwan is given to Chiang Kai-Shek.

      After Sun Yat-Sen’s death in 1925, the Nationalist Party, with political maneuvering and a coup d’etat in China by Chiang Kai-Shek, allowed him to take over and in 1926, his army began. He was a military leader who believed in a strong central government. After the long 8-year war (1937-45) with Japan, Taiwan was returned to China after 50 years of Japanese occupation. Civil war recommenced in 1946; by 1949 Chiang had lost continental China to the communists, and the People’s Republic of China was established. Unfortunately, China Communists, backed by the Soviet Union, to help escalate their rebellion by 1949, caused the mainland to be overrun and Chiang’s conservative seat of government was moved to Taiwan. Chiang moved to Taiwan with the remnants of his Nationalist forces. Chiang reformed the ranks of the once-corrupt Nationalist Party, and with the help of American aid he succeeded in the next two decades in setting Taiwan on the road to modern economic development.

      In 1955 the United States signed an agreement with Chiang’s Nationalist government on Taiwan guaranteeing its defense. Of course, from 1972 -1979 US relations with Taiwan were not good because of good relations with China. After that time, unofficial relations between the 2 countries improved consistently as reliance on each other’s exports grew. In recent years, the US has been strengthening this support of Taiwan.

      After Chiang's death, in the 1980s and 1990s moved to increase native Taiwanese representation in the government and loosen the many authoritarian controls of the early era of ROC control in Taiwan, paving way for the democratization process.

      Chiang was a very complicated leader and his politics and alliances often looked like Capitalism, Fascism, Communism or some hybrid version that worked in each circumstance. He was conservative but at the same time supported modernization policies in science, advanced technology, education for all and women’s rights.

      After the period of Japanese occupation, the country has tried to eliminate most of the Japanese culture that was here and make it more tradition Chinese backed by the Constitution which supports and funds cultural work.

      The Chiang Kai-Shek Memorial Hall, as well as the Concert Hall and National Theater at Liberty Square began in 1976 after his death. The memorial hall is white with a blue roof, representing the dominant colors in the ROC flag; while the emblem of the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) adorns the vaulted ceiling. A bronze statue of Chiang looks west symbolically to the Presidential Office Building and mainland China. The front plaza of the hall is also a major venue for democratic assemblies of all types.

      It was quite an impressive 2.5 million square foot plaza and it was obvious that people come here to celebrate all different important occasions. We learned a lot about its history and that of Chiang Kai-Shek while visiting this austere and important Liberty Plaza and while we spent a long time watching the importance of their changing of the guard ceremony and listening to people’s conversations and respect for the history that led to their freedom.
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    • Day 148

      Taipei, Taiwan- Memorial & Museum 2 of 2

      June 11, 2023 in Taiwan ⋅ 🌧 81 °F

      Note; See Liberty Square 1 of 2 posting for discussion of Changing of the Guard and Chiang Kai-Shek Memorial at Liberty Square.

      Our visit to the National Palace Museum (built in 1965) provided an incredible view of many of the 700,000 “acquisitions” that Chiang Kai-Shek brought with him from China to Taiwan as the possessions of the people of Taiwan. There are collections here that date back 8,000 years of Chinese history including Chinese art, calligraphy, lacquerware, treasures, jade, porcelain, and embroidery.Read more

    • Day 148

      Taipei,Taiwan Evening LATERNS- 1 of 3

      June 11, 2023 in Taiwan ⋅ 🌧 81 °F

      The Pingxi Sky Lantern Festival has been held since 1999 and is an important highlight in Taiwan as it has long been used for people to make prayers and wishes. During the Lantern Festival, March each year, lanterns, with wishes on them, cover the entire sky of Pingxi. Local Taiwanese and foreign visitors experience this unique cultural activity of lantern launching all year round.

      What fun: We took a bus to Shifen, purchased a lantern, painted on our Wish/Prayer, went to the tracks and let it fly from the train tracks that used to carry coal to the area (yes, the train still runs and we needed to check the schedule before lighting our lantern on the tracks).

      We wrote two of our prayers on two sides (RED: Health and Peace, YELLOW: Money and Wealth) and our Israeli friends Eli and Orna wrote on the other two sides. We walked it over to the tracks, the “lantern lighter” person prepped our lantern and lit it and then we took a deep breath and let it go up in the sky over the mountains!
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    • Day 148

      Taipei-Keelung, Taiwan Eve MARKET-2 of 3

      June 11, 2023 in Taiwan ⋅ 🌧 81 °F

      Keelung Night Market is one of a kind. We have seen open air markets everywhere but this one required a guided tour since it was so unique in the products, foods, services and games we saw for sale. The funniest part was that everywhere we went, up and down all the streets, we ran into friends from the ship trying every cuisine and looking for everything from deodorant (me) and luggage for those few extra things collected (definitely not us).

      Street vendors were selling food and drink of every variety. Some classic foods include: skewered meats/fish, tempura, sandwiches, chicken rolls, butter crab, thick bean-sprout soup, fresh seafood, pork knuckle, and many soups including braised eel soup. Some were products that are only sold here, like ding bian cuo (a Taiwanese specialty from Keelung made of thin pieces of rice flour batter cooked in a soup containing meat and seafood), unique rice and bean dishes, strange seafood, and great desserts and bubble ices. One unique characteristic of Keelung Night Market “snacks” (they looked like meals to us) is that vendors cook and present all of their dishes clearly in front of customers, each dish with its own flavor and history.

      After a guided tour of the marketplace, we went out on our own and roamed around as we checked out the people, the food and the activities. See the photos and videos. What a fun evening!
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    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Zhongzheng Qiao, 中正橋

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