Hold your breath, this may hurt a bit.
First consider the founding of the United States. The Puritans reached New England in 1620, a harsh land of trees, stones, infertile soil, long harrowing winters, and short summers. They almost starved; indeed, half their number died during the first winter. Only 16 years after their unpromising arrival, a college was founded, called Harvard. Two years after that, in 1638, a printing press was set up and books were printed. (The first printing press in London was established by John Lattou in 1480; the first English language text was not published until 1525. Before the Industrial Revolution technology was transmitted much more slowly, so having a press so soon in Massachusetts, at the far end of the world, a month or more away from Europe by ship, was amazing; there were very few contemporary printers in London or Paris.) In 1663, only one generation after the Pilgrims landed, 1500 copies of a bible translated into Wampanoag, an Algonquian Indian language, were printed: the title is worth copying out as a testimonial to the valiant proofreader:
Mamusse Wunneetupanatamwe Up-Biblum God, Naneeswe Nukkone Testament, Kah Wonk Wusku Testament
Has a definite ring to it, doesn’t it? But you can see the translator fudging: Biblum? Testament? Before long this barren land, far from any center of civilization, boasted painters and poets, authors and thinkers, pewtersmiths and silversmiths, as well as hundreds of curious minds tinkering with machinery and inquiring into sciences.
Now consider Taiwan, a fertile island with a mild climate, just a short hop across the straits from mainland China. Before the Japanese grabbed Taiwan, no open schools were founded, no books were published, no inquiries into science developed, there were no original thinkers, painters, or authors. Chinese are not evangelical, but no effort was made to civilize the Aborigines; rather, they were hunted (冬令進補) and exterminated whenever possible. During their exploitation of Taiwan, the Japanese educated only a small number of nipponized Chinese beyond third grade; the few who managed to obtain higher education produced nothing noteworthy in arts or sciences. To call the painting of the day second rate is to praise it too highly.
Japanese imperialism in Taiwan ended on the decks of the battleship Missouri in Tokyo Bay. The Japanese did their best to wreck the economy of Taiwan before they left. When the Nationalist government accepted the return of Taiwan, they were reeling from eight years of unspeakable cruelty by sadistic Japanese armies, and bleeding from attacks by Chairman Mao, who, backed by Stalin, promised to wash Taiwan in blood. Under these circumstances, the Nationalist (KMT) government immediately established schools for everybody, instituted higher education on the basis of merit (大專聯攷) rather than family, connections, or money, gave Aborigines seats in legislative bodies and positions in the armed forces and police, and brought incredible intellectual and artistic growth in everything from biology to dance. It is fair to say that the high culture in Taiwan is the product of the Nationalist government.
Now the DPP is tearing apart Taiwan’s education under the guise of loving Taiwan. Perhaps the policy of dismantling education and 愚民政策 making the people stupid is designed with the idea that they will get reelected if the electorate is stupid enough to vote for a party whose Minister of Education openly picks his nose in a public hearing in the Legislature. (My belief is that legislators, of whatever stripe, of whatever caliber, are elected by the People; an appointed government official, who has not earned his seat through the will of the People, who shows disrespect to a popularly elected official, shows disrespect to the People who voted in elections, and to the spirit of democracy.)
I have no intention whatsoever to act as a spokesman or an apologist for the KMT, but I do think credit should go where credit is due, and I am sad to see education being trampled.
I wrote this a year ago. Now a new mood has grown in Taiwan, since voters thoroughly stomped on the DPP in the last several elections. We all hope for a better future to come soon.