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Peng Ming-min

Taiwanese activist and legal scholar (1923–2022)

Peng Ming-min

Summary

Taiwanese activist and legal scholar (1923–2022)

FieldValue
smallimage彭明敏出席著作簽書分享會.jpg
captionPeng in 2017
namePeng Ming-min
nationalityTaiwanese
orderSenior Adviser to the President of the Republic of China
term_start20 May 2000
term_end20 May 2008
presidentChen Shui-bian
birth_date
birth_placeTaikō Town, Taikō District, Taichū Prefecture, Taiwan, Japan (modern-day Dajia District, Taichung, Taiwan)
death_date
death_placeTaipei, Taiwan
partyDemocratic Progressive Party (19951997)
professionLawyer
native_name{{no bold彭明敏}}
educationTokyo Imperial University (LLB)
National Taiwan University (BA)
McGill University (LLM)
University of Paris (PhD)

| honorific-suffix = National Taiwan University (BA) McGill University (LLM) University of Paris (PhD)

Peng Ming-min (; 15 August 19238 April 2022) was a Taiwanese democracy activist, advocate of Taiwan independence, legal scholar, and politician. Arrested for sedition in 1964 for printing a manifesto advocating democracy in his native Taiwan, he escaped to Sweden, before taking a post as a university teacher in the United States. After 22 years in exile he returned to become the Democratic Progressive Party's first presidential candidate in Taiwan's first direct presidential election in 1996.

Early life and education

Peng was born in Taichū Prefecture on August 15, 1923, to a prominent and wealthy family of Taiwanese doctors. He received his primary education in Taiwan before going to Tokyo for secondary education, graduating from Kwansei Gakuin Middle School in 1939 and the Third Higher School in 1942. During World War II, he studied law and political science at the Tokyo Imperial University (now the University of Tokyo). At the end of the war, in order to avoid the American bombing of Japan's capital, he decided to go to his brother near Nagasaki. En route to his brother, he lost his left arm in a bombing raid. While recuperating at his brother's house, he witnessed the second atomic blast that destroyed the city of Nagasaki.

After the Japanese surrender, Peng returned to Taiwan and enrolled at National Taiwan University. He was studying for his bachelor's degree in political science when the February 28 Incident occurred. {{blockquote| During these terrifying weeks I remained quietly within my grandmother's house, frightened and worried. I had not been a member of any politically active group on the campus, and my name was on no petition or manifesto. No soldiers came to search our house, and I was not called out in the middle of the night as were some friends who disappeared. For all my hard work toward a degree in political science at the university, I was still far removed from practical politics and very naive. I had not yet fully realized how much more threatened our personal freedom was now than it had been under the Japanese. In several letters to my father at this time I expressed an angry reaction to the terrible things taking place at Taipei. I did not then know that my father's mail was being censored until one day the chief of police at Kaohsiung quietly warned my father to tell his son not to write such letters, and that my name too was now on a blacklist.}}

After receiving his bachelor's degree, Peng went on to pursue a master's degree (LL.M. 1953) at the Institute of Air and Space Law at the McGill University Faculty of Law in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, where he earned his LL.M. under John Cobb Cooper. He then completed doctoral studies in France and earned his doctoral degree in law at the University of Paris in 1954. During his studies, Peng wrote some of the first essays on international air law published in France, Canada and Japan. His publications attracted considerable international attention and distinguished Peng as a pioneer in the new field of international air law.

Academic career and exile

Peng Ming-min (center) with colleagues at National Taiwan University in 1954

Peng returned to Taiwan and in 1957, at age 34, he became the youngest full professor at the National Taiwan University. While Peng was a professor and chairman of the Department of Political Science from 1961 to 1962, he attracted the attention of Chiang Kai-shek and other Kuomintang (KMT) leaders. Chiang appointed Peng as the advisor to the Republic of China's delegation to the United Nations, then the highest political position held by any Taiwanese, and hinted of future high-level governmental appointments. He quoted:

In 1964, Peng and two of his students, Hsieh Tsung-min and , created advocating the overthrow of the Chiang regime and the establishment of a democratic government in Taiwan. The three painstakingly printed 10,000 copies in secret, but before the manifesto could be distributed, Peng and his students were arrested on 20 September 1964. They languished in jail for several months before being tried for sedition by a military court. Peng was sentenced to eight years of imprisonment but his case attracted worldwide attention. Bowing to the increasing international pressure, Chiang Kai-shek released Peng from military prison 14 months later, but placed him under house arrest for life with strict surveillance.

By 1968, his house arrest had become so suffocating that friends and Takayuki Munakata, a member of the Taiwan independence movement in Japan helped plan for Peng's escape from Taiwan. In 1970, Peng managed to travel by plane to Hong Kong and from there to Sweden with a forged passport. He was granted political asylum in Sweden, but despite the freedom he enjoyed in Europe, he decided to pursue an appointment at the University of Michigan. Both the KMT and the Chinese Communist Party strenuously objected, but the United States granted his request for a visa and Peng arrived in Michigan in August 1970. During his time at Michigan, he wrote his autobiography A Taste of Freedom.

While in exile, Peng continued to be a leading figure in Taiwan politics and American foreign policy issues. In 1981, he co-founded the Formosan Association for Public Affairs (FAPA), a Taiwanese lobbying organization based in Washington D.C. Peng served as FAPA's president from 1986 to 1988 and chaired the Asia-Pacific Democracy Association in 1989. He also testified on Taiwan issues before the United States Congress on several occasions.

Return to Taiwan

With the death of Chiang Ching-kuo in 1988, Lee Teng-hui assumed the presidency and began to reform Taiwanese government. In 1992, he promulgated a revision of of the Criminal Code which not only allowed Taiwanese to advocate independence without being charged with sedition, but also granted amnesty to political prisoners and ended the overseas blacklist. No longer threatened with arrest, Peng returned to Taiwan on 2 November 1992 to a crowd of 1,000 people at Taoyuan International Airport. He had been in exile for 22 years. Peng joined the Democratic Progressive Party in February 1995.

On 28 September 1995, after an arduous two-tiered nomination process involving 49 public debates around Taiwan, the Democratic Progressive Party nominated Peng as their candidate for Taiwan's first presidential elections. Outspokenly running on a platform of Taiwanese independence, he garnered 21% of the votes, a distant second to the incumbent Lee Teng-hui, who won the election.

1996 Republic of China Presidential Election ResultPresident CandidateVice President CandidatePartyVotes%
Lee Teng-huiLien Chan[[Image:Emblem of the Kuomintang.svg25px]] Kuomintang5,813,69954.00
Peng Ming-minFrank HsiehDemocratic Progressive Party2,274,58621.13
Lin Yang-kangHau Pei-tsunIndependent1,603,79014.90
Chen Li-anWang Ching-fengIndependent1,074,0449.98
Invalid/blank votes117,160
Total10,883,279100

In 2001, after Chen Shui-bian was elected president, Peng was appointed one of Chen's senior advisors.

Later life and death

In 2009, Peng's A Perfect Escape (逃亡), was published in Chinese, revealing the details of his dramatic escape in 1970. In July 2015, Peng and three others founded the Taiwan Independence Action Party. English translations of his articles were occasionally published in the Taipei Times.

Peng died on 8 April 2022 at age 98. His remains were interred in a cemetery at the Presbyterian Church in Yancheng District, Kaohsiung.

Personal life

Peng was an ardent baseball fan as a young boy, and when Babe Ruth visited Japan in the 1930s, he wrote a letter to Ruth and received an autograph in return.

References

References

  1. (8 April 2022). "「彭教授」與李競選總統 囑扁勿向馬求饒 婉拒任蔡資政". United Daily News.
  2. world, Taiwan Panorama Magazine {{!}} An international, bilingual magazine for Chinese people around the. "總統候選人的少年時代".
  3. (17 April 2005). "Peng's beliefs secures him a place in Taiwan's history". Taipei Times.
  4. (30 October 1992). "Taiwanese Dissident Going Home After 22 Years In U.S.". Seattle Times.
  5. Peng, Ming-min. (1972). "A Taste of Freedom: Memoirs of a Formosan Independence Leader". Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
  6. (17 April 2005). "Democratic gains require protection". Taipei Times.
  7. (November 2017). "Taiwan eyes Montreal meeting". Postmedia News}}{{dead link.
  8. (1966). "Continuing Student Agitation in Indonesia". Springer.
  9. Kerr, George. (1965). "[[Formosa Betrayed (1965 book)". Houghton Mifflin.
  10. Munakata, Takayuki. (1996). "Taiwan dokuritsu undō shiki. 35-nen no yume". Bungei Shunjū.
  11. Loa Lok-Sin. (21 September 2008). "Peng Tells Details of Escape From KMT". Taipei Times.
  12. [https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v17/d65 Link text], 1970 Memorandum from the Department of State.
  13. Tung, Jung-tzu. (8 April 2022). "「台獨教父」彭明敏今晨辭世 享耆壽98歲". Public Television Service.
  14. (June 1992). "Article 100 Revised". International Committee for Human Rights in Taiwan.
  15. Taiwan Communique no. 57, [http://www.taiwandc.org/twcom/57-toc.htm "Professor Peng Ming Min Returns"], December 1992.
  16. (30 September 1995). "DPP nominates a former professor as its first presidential candidate". Taiwan Today/Taiwan Info.
  17. Taiwan Communique no. 68, "[http://www.taiwandc.org/twcom/68-no4.htm#peng Professor Peng is DPP's Candidate for Presidency]", October 1995.
  18. Tyler, Patrick, [https://www.nytimes.com/1996/03/23/world/taiwan-votes-for-president-and-celebrates-democracy.html "Taiwan Votes for President and Celebrates Democracy"], ''New York Times'', 23 March 1996.
  19. Peng, Ming-Min, [https://www.nytimes.com/1996/03/04/opinion/taiwan-belongs-to-no-one.html "Taiwan Belongs to No One"], New York Times, 4 March 1996.
  20. Times News Services,"[https://archive.seattletimes.com/archive/19960324/2320721/taiwan-picks-incumbent-democracy----chest-pounding-by-china-fails-to-sway-election "Taiwan Picks Incumbent, Democracy"], ''Seattle Times'', 24 March 1996.
  21. (29 April 2000). "Peng appointed as advisor to Taiwan's new president". United Press International.
  22. (20 May 2001). "President Chen Appoints Advisers". Office of the President.
  23. Ko, Shu-ling, [http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2009/06/15/2003446228 "Peng Ming-min Launches New Book, Castigates Ma"], ''Taipei Times'', 15 June 2009.
  24. (3 July 2015). "Independence party enters fray". Taipei Times.
  25. (7 October 2014). "'Spiritual contract' with Beijing?". Taipei Times.
  26. (8 July 2016). "When a plot by a sneaky neighbor falls apart". Taipei Times.
  27. (8 April 2022). "Peng Ming-min, a lifelong advocate for Taiwan and democracy, dies at 98".
  28. Yang, Sophia. (2022-04-08). "Veteran Taiwan independence activist Peng Ming-min passes away at 98". Taiwan News.
  29. (9 April 2022). "Democracy pioneer Peng Ming-min dies at age 98". Taipei Times.
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