Understandable
| You might want to sit down for this. The word "American" has many connotations. Myself – I think of democracy, black and white portrait photographs of dead presidents, freedom, and the Gilded Age. Immigrants come to "America," half-expecting golden streets and flowing cash. They assimilate into "American" culture, looking for liberty and opportunity. “American” isn’t alone in being a multi-flavored word. I think of “Taiwanese” people as cheerful, open, technologically advanced, forward-thinking people. Like many people, I tend to dwell on the best of my heritage. “TAF” (or "Taiwanese American Foundation" the summer camp) too, has a connotation truly my own. I associate “TAF” campers and counselors with “generous”, “sincere”, “loving,” and “pro-Taiwan.” After a week of lauding the distinct flavors of Taiwanese food, nightmarkets, clothing styles, music, and culture in general, I can't imagine one of my friends supporting unification with China - a culture we have decided as different from ours. They are, in my mind, linked to two nations. All that said: it is mathematically proven that a “Taiwanese-American” is friendly, democratic, and technologically advanced, with high hopes for a bright future. Throw a TAF participant into the mix, and an all-around cultured and lovable person is the result. Pop. It was sudden. I was writing about the heated Frank Hsieh-Ma Ying Jeou race when I realized the possibility of any audience member having different opinions than myself. I had just assumed that my audience – you - would lean the same way I did. The inklings of truth have been cropping up everywhere. Some members of The TAF Blogring on Xanga are pro-unification, others aren't. Some support Ma Ying Jeou, or else Frank Hsieh. Some are Republican, Democrat, Undecided. In Facebook groups, I see the idea of Taiwanese pride displayed differently. CNN, Time, Newsweek, Associated Press, the local newspapers – they interview declared “Taiwanese-Americans” with views that vary from person to person. Every person is different. This is not an idea new to me, and I am dumbstruck by my own naïveté. I had assumed that if you actively engaged in Taiwanese-American organizations, spread Taiwanese culture and politics, or knew that boba originated in Taiwan, then you would be friendly, democratic, technologically advanced, and have high hopes for a bright future. My epiphany has shown me that “Taiwanese American” has a meaning I’d often ignored. It simply means you have at least a drop of Taiwanese blood and you live/lived in America. This phrase says nothing about your political affiliations, favorite ethnic food, or whether you kick sleeping puppies. So, I know nothing of your personality or opinions but you may stand for whatever doesn’t make you want to sit. Jessica posts posts at http://www.xanga.com/skiazoura. The writing there is not her own, but she encourages readers to guess if she’s a puppy kicker herself. |








Comments on "Understandable"
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Jeff Chieh said ... (1:18 AM) :
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kshih said ... (11:06 PM) :
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kshih said ... (11:07 PM) :
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Priya Sekar said ... (11:37 AM) :
post a commentThis is ironic because I had the exact opposite experiences growing up. For me (and I'm sure this is true for the 200+ students that I attended Chinese school with back in Jersey), being Taiwanese was a synonym for being Chinese. We spoke the same language, ate the same food, shared the same heritage... in my mind we were never separate.
I remember one time (I think it was my college apps), I was asked "what country are your ancestors from?" I replied "Taiwan", in which my sister remarked "Taiwan's not a country"... not because she was blue or anti-independence... but because that's just how we were raised.
In fact, the very idea that Taiwan could be considered a separate country never even occurred to me until I attended ITASA my senior year of college, when I was casually wondering what the heck blue and green meant. After digging into the topic, it was like unearthing another world that I hadn't even known existed.
Quite the shock for someone who consistantly referred to himself as "Taiwanese-American" with pride... (and just as easily interchanged it with Chinese-American when the situation called for it).
Nowadays I am much more informed about the history of Taiwan and China and Japan and the KMT and the Communists.
I have my views and opinions of Taiwan, and they may differ from yours or someone elses or my parents. But as long as we're all informed, we can sit down and discuss it in a civil manner.
it's been eye-opening for me to meet people with such varied opinions in college. my friend's family is blue to the core, and he really hated the chen administration, but he hates china even more. when i showed him the video for my post above, he reacted far more vehemently than i did... my family is about as left as you can get, and that's how i was raised, but i think that might be why i take everything i see with a grain of salt, as not to be blindly led into the propaganda of either side.
probably not hard to tell i lean green though, despite my attempts to be balanced. heh.
why did i say left? i meant green. bleeding hell, i'm mixing american political jargon into my ta.org posts...
This blog is great, and as an Indian American, I have always found the "melting pot" experience between first generation cultures to be fascinating.
I too used to assume that people would think the same as me, particularly first generation Asians of any kind whose parents moved to the States for "a better life". I just moved out of Cincinnati, OH after a 3-year fellowship, and that experience definitely showed me the differences among Americans in perception. Sometimes lack of acknowledging differences is worse than perseverating on them.
I've now moved to Canada and the whole ideology is different here.
Keep blogging, hope you have a great trip in Taiwan! -Priya Sekar