On Taiwan’s ‘Nazi parade’ scandal | Inquirer Opinion

On Taiwan’s ‘Nazi parade’ scandal

/ 12:08 AM December 31, 2016

A school event in Taiwan came to the forefront of international media last week. A group of students from a private high school wore self-fashioned Nazi uniforms and wielded swastika banners at their school’s “Christmas and Thanksgiving Costume Parade” on Dec. 23. When one netizen forwarded the photos to the Israeli representative office in Taipei, the debate escalated into a diplomatic affair.

The Presidential Office apologized for the presentation, which it described as “disrespectful to the Jewish people’s suffering at the hands of war and representative of ignorance toward modern history.” The Ministry of Education also responded by threatening to cut subsidies to the school. Before the day ended, the school’s principal had apologized for the school’s negligence and failure to educate the students. He resigned the next day.

The parade was widely criticized in Taiwanese society, but there were also people who questioned why representations of Nazis deserved universal and high-profile condemnation in a nation where people seemed to have no problem role-playing, or even outright worshipping, other authoritarian figures such as Taiwan’s former president Chiang Kai-shek.

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Taiwan’s complicated history means that some of its citizens have a less-than-straightforward interpretation of World War II history. Taiwan came into the war technically as part of the Axis powers, as it was a colony of the Japanese empire. Taiwan was handed to the Republic of China by Japan after the latter’s defeat in the war. However, this “retrocession” is regarded by a number of people in Taiwan as merely a change of rulers. The ambivalence of Taiwanese people toward their national identity remains one of the biggest sociopolitical issues in the nation.

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Just as the event was going the way of all gaffe-prompted scandals in Taiwan—with strong reactions, public condemnations, heads rolling and the public moving on to the next buzz topic—some of the school’s students released a strongly worded online response rallying support for the resigning principal and challenging the government. In the post, the students said that they did not deserve such public humiliation as they had “done nothing wrong” and were simply taking part in a “costume event.”

Instead of drumming up support for the principal, the article was criticized even by people who regarded the government’s response as heavy-handed. While the online post revealed the students’ lack of understanding of the significance of holding a mock Nazi parade, it also demonstrated that they were not heartless teenagers who cared nothing about other people’s suffering. The students wrote the post out of concern for their principal, who was reportedly beloved at the school and demonstrated care for his students by assuming full responsibility for the scandal.

The “why should I care” attitude demonstrated by both the students who staged the rally and those who penned the response reflect the failure of Taiwan’s utilitarian education system, in which school is regarded as little more than a two-decade vocational training program. Students have little respect for history lessons because they are trained to view the subject as a series of facts that will allow them to pass an exam.

In fact, these students are the victims of a shallow utilitarianism that prevails in Taiwan. President Tsai recognized this in her first response to the incident on Dec. 29, saying that “the students are not at fault, the fault lies in (us) grownups.”

Ironically, such utilitarianism is evident in the government’s response to the Nazi parade controversy. The Ministry of Education’s first reaction was to threaten to cut funding for a school that clearly needed more support. The government approached the incident purely from a political and diplomatic point of view. The students who organized the display and those who responded clearly lack civic sensibilities and historical knowledge, but they were right to feel that, instead of receiving guidance for their errors, they had been thrown under the bus by a government that handled the event merely as a PR scandal to be contained.

Alan Fong is executive deputy editor in chief of The China Post, Taiwan.

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