Lee Teng-hui: An icon of Asian democracy

Japan Times
Date: Aug 3, 2020
By:  Brad Glosserman

COMMENTARY

FILE – In this May 31, 2007, file photo, former Taiwanese President Lee Teng-hui smiles as he holds his own Haiku poem in front of a statue of Basho Matsuo, popular Haiku poet at Basho Museum in Tokyo. Local media are reporting that ex-Taiwanese President Lee Teng-hui, who oversaw the island’s transition to full democracy, has died. Lee was 97 and had largely dropped out of public life in his later years. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara, File)

Lee Teng-hui, one of Asia’s democracy icons, died last week at the age of 97. As president of Taiwan, he steered the island faithfully and unswervingly toward democracy, promoting Taiwanese identity and, later in life, independence. In stark contrast to that singular focus and mission, his life was an extraordinary meander, a journey that spanned the political spectrum and during which he delighted in provoking all who challenged him.

Lee was born in 1923 to a well-off family in a farming community in northern Taiwan, several decades into the Japanese rule of the island. His father worked for the colonial rulers as part of the police. Lee earned a scholarship to study agronomy at Kyoto Imperial University. While there, he enlisted in the Japanese Imperial Army, rising to the rank of second lieutenant, although he never saw action during World War II.

Detailed to Taiwan during the conflict, he was ordered back to Japan before the war’s close. He remained in Japan after surrender and finished his degree in 1946. Lee returned to Taiwan to study agricultural science at National Taiwan University. In one of the meanders that marked his life, Lee joined the Chinese Communist Party in 1946, feeling that it could help him promote Taiwanese identity, although he soon left the party, disillusioned.

All the while, Lee focused on agricultural economics, getting a masters degree from Iowa State University and then joining the Joint Commission on Rural Reconstruction, a U.S.-sponsored program to promote modernization of Taiwan’s agricultural sector. He also taught at two universities in Taiwan before returning to the United States to get a Ph.D. in agricultural economics at Cornell University.    [FULL  STORY]

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