Dec 1, 2021
A note from Talking Taiwan host Felicia Lin:
Tim Chng is one of the founders of ITASA (Intercollegiate
Taiwanese American Students Association), and we’ve known each
other since those college days. He is currently documenting the
overseas Taiwan Independence Movement on Wikipedia.
I thought I’d invite him onto Talking Taiwan to talk about some
of the media attention that Taiwan’s been getting lately, and the
project he’s started to document the contributions of WUFI (World
United Formosans for Independence) and overseas Taiwanese to the
fight for Taiwan’s freedom and democracy.
After a non-Taiwanese friend of mine texted me asking about who
Enes Kanter was and why he was speaking up about Taiwan, I realized
that it would be a good idea to do an episode about this and other
celebrities who have shed light on Taiwan- for good and bad.
Enes Kanter, a basketball player for the NBA’s Boston Celtics,
has called for boycotting the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics and
caused quite a stir by tweeting and speaking out about Taiwan being
a free and democratic country, and not a part of China. Twitter was
all abuzz over this.
I had seen Tim weighing in on the Twitter discussion about Enes,
so I thought it would be fun to invite him on to Talking Taiwan to
share his thoughts on all of this.
I knew that we’d have an interesting conversation. We talked
about Enes, John Oliver, John Cena and even Peng Shui, the Chinese
women’s tennis player whose safety and whereabouts have been in
question ever since her post on a Chinese social media platform
(Weibo) about being sexually assaulted by a retired Chinese
Communist party leader was deleted.
Tim also talked about what motivated him to start documenting
the Taiwan independence movement on Wikipedia, and how in a broader
sense it is about recognizing the role of Taiwan’s diaspora in the
fight for Taiwan’s freedom and democracy during the White Terror
era.
If you’re interested in helping Tim with this project you can do
so simply by creating a login on Wikipedia, which as Tim said is
really quite easy to do, and you can start editing and adding to
the Wikipedia pages about WUFI or the Taiwan independence
movement.
Here’s a little preview of what we talked about in this
podcast episode:
- The background of Enes Kanter NBA’s Celtics team, has spoken up
for Taiwan
- How Enes Kanter and his family has been blacklisted by the
Turkish government
- How Enes’ father went to prison for speaking up against
Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
- Taiwan’s blacklist
- Comparing the struggles and conflict that the Uyghers, and
people of Hong Kong, Tibet and Taiwan’s have with China
- Badiucao, the artist who created the art and designs for Enes
Kanter’s sneakers that called for a boycott of the Beijing 2022
Winter Olympics and the Stand With Taiwan sneakers
- The perception that Taiwan’s democracy was a direct result of
Chiang Ching-kuo lifting martial law in Taiwan
- How the father (Dr. Kang-lu Wang) of one of ITASA’s founders
(Alvin Wang) was assassinated by the Kuomintang (KMT)
- What led Tim to start his project to document the Taiwan
independence movement, especially the resistance movement amongst
overseas Taiwanese
- How the resistance movement of overseas Taiwanese in the
1950s-1980s is not taught in history books and hasn’t been well
documented
- Documenting WUFI (World United Formosans for Independence) on
Wikipedia
- How difficult it was to get media coverage on Taiwan in the
1950s-1980s
- How New Bloom was contacted and consulted by John Oliver’s team
for his segment about Taiwan
- How Taiwan needs allies and support as it stands up to
China
- What is problematic about what Enes Kanter is saying about
China
- Tsai Ing-wen’s public statement thanking Enes Kanter for his
support
- Whether or not the U.S. really cares about Taiwan’s
self-determination or freedom
- The KMT’s network of overseas student spies during the martial
law era
- How organizers of the first ITASA conference at Yale University
received an anonymous intimidating letter
- How no one from Yale University was able to attend the Love
Boat program in the year following the Yale ITASA conference
- How Tim and his family were blacklisted and not allowed to
return to Taiwan
- What inspired many WUFI members and overseas Taiwan
independence activists to stand up for Taiwan and to attempt to
free Taiwan from authoritarian rule
- How Peter Huang who attempted to assassinate Chiang Ching-kuo
was a WUFI member
- How many overseas Taiwanese students were inspired by the Cuban
revolution
- How within WUFI there were members who were KMT spies
- The founding of WUFI in 1971 and how it united organizations in
Japan, Europe, the United States, and Canada
- How WUFI members were responsible much of the U.S. media
coverage on Taiwan
- The Taiwanese American Association of America (TAA), the
grassroots arm of WUFI
- Fundraising efforts for the Taiwanese political drama Island
Nation 2
- What motivated Chiang Ching-kuo to lift martial law in
Taiwan
- Tim’s criticism of John Oliver’s segment on Taiwan
- John Oliver’s criticism of John Cena, the pro wrestler and
actor who apologized to China after calling Taiwan a country
- What happened to Chinese tennis player Peng Shuai and what may
have motivated her to speak about how she was sexually assaulted by
Zhang Gaoli, a former high-ranking government official and member
of the Chinese Communist Party
- The support that Peng Shuai has gotten from other professional
tennis players
- The Women’s Tennis Association’s (WTA) reaction to Peng Shuai’s
statement about being sexually assaulted and her subsequent
disappearance
- The pressure by the WTA and countries like Finland to cancel on
the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics
- Myanmar and the Free Burma movement
- China's Belt and Road Initiative
- Lithuania’s support of Taiwan
- Tim’s call for others to help contribute his Wikipedia project
documenting the contributions of overseas Taiwanese (from all over
the globe) to Taiwan’s democratization and independence
movement
- WUFI’s 2021 paper calendar commemorating WUFI’s
50thanniversary
- How Professor Chen Wen-chen was part of the WUFI network
- The Taiwan History Facebook group
- The importance of documenting the stories of Taiwan’s diaspora
who fought for Taiwan’s freedom and democracy
Related Links:
To view all related links for this article, click link
below:
https://talkingtaiwan.com/tim-chng-documents-the-overseas-taiwan-independence-movement-on-wikipedia-ep-159/