- Wu Feng Legend
The Wu Feng Legend is a politically-motivated myth once popular in
Taiwan . Long misrepresented as history, it purports to show an example of the Han Chinese having a "civilising" influence on theTaiwanese aborigines through heroic personal sacrifice. During theKuomintang rule of Taiwan, Wu Feng was considered a minor national hero. The myth was originally created during the Japanese colonial era, but its promotion peaked in theKuomintang era. Harvcol|Shepherd|1993|p=475 "n.55"According to the myth, Wu Feng was a Han Chinese who befriended aborigines. He tried to persuade the A-li-shan tribe to give up their practice of
headhunting , but his attempts were unsuccessful. On one occasion he declared that on the following day the aborigines would see a man in a red cloak. He told them they would cut off the man's head, but it would be the last head they ever took. The next day, the aborigines saw a man in a red cloak and decapitated him, only to find they had killed Wu Feng himself. Horrified, they gave up the practice of headhunting forever. [ Lonely Planet: Taiwan]This story was in school history books during the
Kuomintang dictatorship period. However its historicity is now discredited. In 1989, soon after the 1987 lifting ofmartial law in Taiwan and taking advantage of a new-found emphasis on human rights, aborigines who had long been offended by the overtones ofracism in the Wu Feng story protested against its continued presence in history books. As part of the protest, they demolished statues of Wu Feng "wherever they found them." [" [http://www.roc-taiwan.org.sg/taiwan/5-gp/rights/tr_05.htm "Minority, Not Minor."] " Dignity, Respect & Freedom website:Government Information Office, Republic of China. Accessed 8/17/06]The story has since been dropped from Taiwanese history books.
References
*. Reprinted 1995, SMC Publishing, Taipei. ISBN 957-638-311-0
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.