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Annette Lu: ROC 11th-term Vice President-elect
Native daughter of Taiwan, Lu
Hsiu-lien was born in 1944 in the northern Taiwan city of Taoyuan on
the day of the Normandy Invasion in Europe. Although she was almost
given up for adoption twice during her childhood, she was able to
excel in her studies. Her father often read stories of great people
to her, shaping her political thinking, and he also paid special
attention to developing her oratorical skills.
Lu’s mother, in addition to being burdened with
house chores, traveled around Taiwan to help her husband run the
family business, uncharacteristic for women of that time. She proved
to be as strong as a man in her ability to endure hardships, and was
always proud to say, “There is not a single woman in our family
who is not doing the work of men.”
Although Ms. Lu grew up in conservative times, she
always encouraged herself to succeed, hoping to let facts speak for
themselves that men are not necessarily better than women. Upon
graduation from elementary school she won the county magistrate
award, and in her first major school examination, she lived up to
expectations by becoming one of the six girls from Taoyuan to enter
what was then the Taiwan Provincial Taipei First Girls High School,
still Taiwan’s most prestigious high school for girls.
As a teenager, Ms. Lu was especially fond of Dr. Sun
Yat-sen’s foresight and innovative thinking. She also admired Dr.
Hu Shih (1891-1962, also known as Hu Shih-chih) for his liberal
attitude and open-mindedness. These role models led her to choose
the penname “Yat Chih” after Dr. Sun Yat-sen and Hu Shih-chih.
She often put her thoughts and emotions in writing and showed a
profound interest in literature, voraciously reading famous works.
In senior high school, Ms. Lu corresponded with pen
pals in several countries, at one time simultaneously corresponding
with nine pen pals in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom,
Germany, Belgium, Japan, and Nigeria. Such friendships helped her to
develop a broader and more global perspective. Through practical
usage and in interesting ways she encouraged herself to study
English. She felt honored to be engaged in people-to-people
diplomacy, and began to dream about pursuing a diplomatic career
that entailed world travel.
In 1963, Ms. Lu passed the Joint College and
University Entrance Examinations and entered National Taiwan
University (NTU), where she won first place in her class at the
judicial administration division of the Department of Law. Later,
she also scored the highest grades in the entrance exam of NTU’s
Graduate Institute of Law. She was awarded a prestigious scholarship
and left to pursue a master’s degree in comparative law at the
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, in the United States.
During her first trip abroad, she stopped in Tokyo for
a day and was deeply impressed by the prosperous and modern city.
She envied this neighboring Asian city for its convenient subway,
modern high-rises, and comprehensive public facilities. She was
curious as to how others were able to accomplish such feats, and
wondered when Taiwan would become as good, if not better.
In September 1970, at the peak of the women’s
liberation movement in the US, American women celebrated the 50th
anniversary of women’s suffrage. After immersing herself in
contemporary articles and materials on feminist issues, Ms. Lu felt
a deep sadness over the long historical plight of women in
patriarchal societies. She also noticed how women’s groups had
organized and triggered other social movements.
A year later, Ms. Lu returned to Taiwan and was
assigned as both senior specialist and section chief of the
Executive Yuan’s Legal Affairs Committee. At that time, there was
a heated debate about whether universities should set up certain
barriers to prevent girls from entering colleges. In response to the
general attitude favoring boys over girls, and the methods to
deprive women of educational opportunities, she contributed a series
of seven well-written essays for publication in the United Daily
News under the title “Traditional Roles of Men and Women.” At
the age of 27, she launched the new feminist movement in Taiwan.
Ms. Lu believes that new feminism is a new way of
thinking that matches the trend of the times according to the needs
of society. It is a concept that supports prosperity and harmony for
both sexes based on substantial gender equality. Furthermore, it is
a force for helping eliminate traditional prejudices against women,
and constructing a rational value system for modern times. In this
way, women are free to develop independent personalities and
self-respect, which leads to an equal society for both sexes. Ms. Lu
has therefore emphasized three fundamental concepts: First, one must
be a person before being a man or a woman. Second, people should do
what they are best at, regardless of gender. Third, no talents
should be wasted, and women should thus be able to develop their
abilities and wisdom and contribute to society. In order to
establish a new society and realize new feminism, Ms. Lu called for
new measures, including the establishment of an hourly based,
part-time job system; implementation of a flexible working
structure; cooperation in the management of the home; simplification
and beautification of household affairs; and protection for pregnant
women against layoffs and pay cuts. She has expressed her deepest
wish that every Taiwan woman will foster “self-consciousness,
self-love, self-strength, and self-independence.”
Few can understand the difficulty of sowing the seeds
of feminism under such adverse conditions. In the conservative
society of Taiwan, Ms. Lu was wildly attacked and insulted, causing
great physical and psychological anguish. With the help of
enthusiastic supporters, she organized the Women of the Times
Association, which focused on researching documents, publishing
books, organizing activities, and providing consultative services.
Later, the Home for Pioneers was set up as a base for feminist
activities. The Pioneer Press, Women’s Resource Center, and
hotlines were also established, but their operations failed due to
interference from the government, particularly from the
Investigation Bureau of the Ministry of Justice. This was the first
time Ms. Lu became conscious of the ubiquitous presence of the KMT
government’s intelligence service, and it marked the beginning of
her new political realization.
On May 20, 1978, Chiang Ching-kuo was elected the
sixth-term president of the ROC. In December 1978, the United States
announced that on January 1, 1979, it would establish diplomatic
relations with the People’s Republic of China. This was another
severe blow to the people in Taiwan, coming after the ROC’s
withdrawal from the United Nations in 1971 and the signing of the
Shanghai Communiqué of 1972. At the time, Ms. Lu was studying for
her second master’s degree at Harvard University, and immediately
spoke to many scholars and experts about the situation. Once she was
certain that the US would sever diplomatic ties with the ROC, she
was filled with deep sadness. Although many in Taiwan were seeking
to emigrate to other countries, Ms. Lu decided to abandon her
research and return to Taiwan for the National Assembly election.
Taking advantage of the increased freedom of speech during the
campaign period, she told the people important facts and sought to
counter the deception of the government. The problem of Taiwan
became the subject of her speeches, and her strong feelings and
purposeful return to Taiwan aroused the spirit of many Taiwanese,
moving them to tears. The momentum of her campaign swept across the
Taoyuan constituency in northern Taiwan. As a result, the
intelligence service served her warnings and placed her under
surveillance.
The severance of diplomatic relations with the US had
dimmed Taiwan’s future, and greatly changed Ms. Lu’s life. She
joined the pro-democracy, non-KMT camp (dang wai), and
participated in street demonstrations. Her participation in a series
of resistance activities in the midst of suppression eventually drew
her into the vortex of politics. In 1979, after delivering a
20-minute speech at a human rights rally, an event later called the
“Kaohsiung Incident,” she was sentenced to 12 years in prison
for sedition and deprived of her civil rights. She was 36 years old.
Although the dark prison kept her physically in
captivity, it could not confine her thoughts and soul, and she
continued to read and write. After five years and four months of
imprisonment, the efforts of her friends in Taiwan and pressure from
Amnesty International finally helped her win medical leave for
treatment of thyroid carcinoma. While her friends were saddened to
see how prison life had aged her, she urged herself to quickly stand
up again. After having passed through this long and dark valley, she
did not intend to return empty-handed.
When Ms. Lu re-entered society, she astounded people
with her formidable energy. For five years, from her release on
medical parole in March 1985 to 1990, as a prisoner of conscience,
she traveled throughout the US and Europe carrying out a diplomacy
of human rights. She made speeches, visited opposition party leaders
in Japan and South Korea, and received the Massachusetts Teachers
Association Human and Civil Rights Award. Ms. Lu also initiated the
establishment of the North American Taiwanese Women’s Association
and the Clean Election Coalition. She promoted a series of
activities supporting “Popular Democracy and Constitutional
Reform,” participated in discussions on a “Democratic
Constitution” with the Democratic Progressive Party’s
constitution group, and went to the Chinese mainland to preach her
three principles of “humanity, rationality, and goodness” to
high-ranking officials of the State Council and Taiwan Affairs
Office. During this period, Ms. Lu continued to research and write,
and in addition to publishing two novels written during her
imprisonment, These Three Women and Empathy, she also
published I Love Taiwan and Viewing Taiwan from Abroad. She
also wrote Re-trying the Formosa Case and supervised the current
events criticism section of the Taiwan Gong Lun Bao.
In 1991, Ms. Lu initiated the “I Love Taiwan”
movement, and in December of that year, further developed
citizen’s diplomacy by organizing and leading the Alliance for the
Promotion of UN Membership for Taiwan to New York. Thus, she became
the pioneer in promoting Taiwan’s efforts to participate in the
United Nations.
Since childhood, Ms. Lu had dreamed of becoming a
diplomat. At the end of 1992, she took a step closer to fulfilling
that dream when she garnered more than 70,000 votes and was elected
to the Legislative Yuan to represent the Taoyuan area. After being
elected, Ms. Lu’s role and mission were even more clearly defined.
During her three-year term, she tenaciously held her position on the
foreign affairs committee and proposed two policies on
“normalizing Taiwan-Chinese mainland relations” and “making
the Taiwan issue an international one.” She also took the
opportunity to attend international gatherings in order to assert
that “Taiwan is not a part of the People’s Republic of China.”
Ms. Lu knows that it is not easy to make the world
understand the myths and reality of Taipei-Beijing relations.
Therefore, she has worked hard to establish friendly ties with
foreign countries so that they would be more willing to “say
yes” to Taiwan. In addition to raising the visibility of Taiwan in
the international community so as to gain understanding and
attention, Ms. Lu visited high-ranking foreign officials. She also
took the opportunity during interviews with the international media
to talk about the Taiwan issue. After all these efforts, she
succeeded in registering the name “Taiwan International
Alliance” with the US federal government. The establishment of the
alliance enabled relevant affairs to be carried out in a more
convenient and flexible manner and served as a broad international
communication network.
A noteworthy event took place in February 1994, when
Ms. Lu chaired the Third Global Summit of Women held in Taiwan. At
first, this seemed to be a “mission impossible,” because the
original host country, Spain, backed out for economic reasons, and
the conference sponsor did not inquire into Ms. Lu’s willingness
to chair until only six months prior to the summit. She was very
hesitant, worrying that the government would not give her full
support because she was a member of the opposition party. In
addition, Taiwan is not an English-speaking country and language
could pose a barrier. A further problem was how to invite guests
from countries that have no diplomatic relations with the ROC. If
Beijing boycotted the participation of those countries, many might
not come to Taiwan, damaging the success of the conference and
harming Taiwan’s reputation. After consideration, however, Ms. Lu
understood that if the summit could be held in Taiwan, it would be a
great opportunity to raise Taiwan’s international profile. For
Taiwan’s good, Ms. Lu accepted this challenging task.
The summit attracted more than 200 leaders from 70
countries representing governments, business, academia, and the
women’s movement. The theme of the conference was “Women and
Political Leadership,” and during the four-day conference,
numerous ideas and experiences were exchanged and many theses
delivered.
On March 3, 1994, Ms. Lu attended the Preparatory
Meeting for the Fourth United Nations World Conference on Women in
her capacity as an NGO representative. She attended official
observers meetings with official observer status. This disquieted
Beijing, and a battle of boycotts and pressure between Taipei and
Beijing ensued. In recent years, as Taiwan has sought to expand its
international presence, such offensive and defensive struggles
between Taiwan and China have become commonplace.
President Lee Teng-hui thought highly of Ms. Lu’s
outstanding achievements as a legislator in promoting the ROC’s
foreign relations, and invited her to serve as national policy
advisor beginning May 20, 1996. Six months later, she was asked by
the DPP to run for magistrate of Taoyuan County, following the
brutal murder of Magistrate Liu Pang-yu. Fulfilling the ardent
expectations of her hometown, she won the by-election with more than
324,000 votes, re-writing the county’s long history of KMT rule.
Nine months later, she won re-election with an overwhelming 375,000
ballots.
During her tenure of 30 months, Ms. Lu, with her
forthright style and resolve, carried out a policy of environmental,
industrial, cultural, and spiritual reform. She sought to purify,
beautify, and internationalize Taoyuan County, once notorious for
problems of waste disposal and money politics. She re-positioned
Taoyuan as the “nation’s gateway and hope” and directed the
county administration toward these goals. The county government
pursued the three main programs of “building a gold coast,”
“developing the Taoyuan Silicon Valley,” and “promoting
tourism,” by seeking investments that were not only valued by the
central government, but also respected by major national and
international business consortia. The county also obtained the right
to host major activities, such as the National Folk Art Festival,
the Aboriginal Sports Meet, and the first National Games. These
innovations received positive responses. Satisfaction with Ms.
Lu’s administration in Taoyuan County jumped from third last to
third best nationally. The changes also significantly improved the
image of the county and brought new spirit and energy.
As a female magistrate, Ms. Lu did not forget her
commitment to women. She first established the Center for Women and
Children’s Safety to provide assistance, such as a counseling
hotline, legal services, and personal development workshops. She
also introduced school buses to spare parents from worrying about
their children’s safety. She secured funding to build the first
multi-functional women’s center in Taiwan.
The DPP has long been known for its concern for social
welfare, and Ms. Lu has carried out many social service policies,
despite a limited budget. In view of the aging population of Taoyuan
County, she launched a series of policies immediately upon taking
office, including issuing bonuses to the elderly during the three
major traditional holidays; setting up a
“greetings-over-the-phone” protection network for the aged;
distributing chip bracelets to those with mental and physical
disabilities and the aged who, if lost, could be found and sent home
by the police and medical personnel; establishing an emergency
communication system; creating a “university” for senior
citizens; and organizing a human resource bank of seniors so they
could live happy and fulfilling lives after years of dedication to
society.
To accommodate the Ministry of Education’s
smaller-class policy, Ms. Lu worked to build 34 new schools,
including 25 elementary schools. To meet the new era of
international competition, she also officially introduced English
instruction into the curriculum in 1999, and more than 800 classes
were offered. In addition, teaching materials for Holo, Hakka, and
other indigenous languages were compiled. To promote the ideals of
gender equality, a publication for teachers, Gender Campus, and for
students, Youth Gender Express News, were begun.
On December 10, 1999, Ms. Lu was invited to serve as
running mate by Chen Shui-bian, the presidential candidate for the
Democratic Progressive Party. On March 18, 2000, Chen and Lu were
elected as the tenth-term president and vice president of the
Republic of China, winning nearly five million votes. Their election
marked the beginning of a new era of party change, and rule shared
by both men and women.
Since becoming the first woman to serve as vice
president of the ROC on May 20, 2000, Ms. Lu has devoted even
greater effort to promoting her “soft power” ideals: human
rights, democracy, peace, love, and high technological progress. She
has traveled the world over to promote “soft diplomacy” for
Taiwan. She has taken her message to international leaders,
extolling the virtues of “soft power” over the traditional
precepts of “hard power,” which so often lead to centralization
of power and even military hegemony. The vice president has also
worked to raise Taiwan’s profile internationally and focus
attention on Taiwan. Expounding peace, friendship, and harmony, she
has helped Taiwan reach out to the world and lead the world to
Taiwan.
Vice President Lu responded to the US-led war against
terrorism by initiating the “Fight Global Terrorism—Provide
Humanitarian Aid” campaign to bring relief to refugees in
Afghanistan. Moreover, she launched numerous charity initiatives,
including the Sending Love to India and Sending Love to Tibet
campaigns, to convey Taiwan’s love throughout the world and share
the advantages of “soft power” with other countries. An old
Chinese proverb states: “Those who are moral will never be
alone.” Vice President Lu’s efforts have won her considerable
acclaim and a string of honors, including the 2001 World Peace
Prize, the 2003 honorary award for special contribution—also known
as the Taiwan Nobel Prize—from the Taiwanese-American Foundation,
and the first Alumni Achievement Award of 2003 from the College of
Law of the University of Illinois. As a woman of great modesty,
however, the vice president attributed the honor to the efforts of
her fellow citizens, saying that the prizes represent global
affirmation of the Taiwanese people.
Vice President Lu has demonstrated to the
international community Taiwan’s efforts and achievements in human
rights, democracy, pacifism, and humanitarianism. Moreover, she has
traveled extensively throughout Taiwan in her capacity as convener
of the Presidential Office’s Science and Technology Consulting
Committee to promote the development of the high-tech industry—a
pillar of Taiwan’s economy—and to appeal for the investment of
capital and talent. The vice president has offered incisive views on
the localization and internationalization of Taiwan’s tourism
industry, and has taken on the heavy responsibility of revitalizing
local tourism as convener of the National Federation of Tourism. In
addition, she has provided assistance and made more than 60
inspection tours to areas hit hardest by 1999’s September 21
Earthquake, one of her most important tasks. For three years
following the disaster, Vice President Lu made annual trips to
Nantou and Taichung on the anniversary of the quake to join local
residents in prayers for blessings, offering comfort and taking
concrete steps to speed reconstruction.
To promote the concepts of this new era, Vice
President Lu, in her capacity as convener of the Presidential
Office’s Human Rights Advisory Committee, has demonstrated
outstanding dedication to bringing the nation’s human rights in
line with international standards. She also pushed for the
establishment of the Pacific Democratic Union, expanding Taiwan’s
vision to encompass the entire Pacific region and uniting Pacific
Rim democracies into a single community under the common values of
democracy, ocean civilization, and sustainable development.
The vice president’s four-year term passed quickly.
Other senior DPP members deferred in favor of her service and
experience, and she was again invited to join President Chen
Shui-bian to run for re-election. The presidential election was
unprecedented in its intensity, which was heightened by the
traumatic shock of a failed assassination attempt that fortunately
caused only slight injuries to both President Chen and herself. On
March 20, 2004, the pair won more than 6.47 million votes to become
the eleventh-term president and vice president of the Republic of
China. A look toward the future shows that an extraordinary era has
already unfolded. This era calls for excellence, innovation, and
even more, accommodation of diversity and pluralistic development.
Vice President Lu is applying these principles to transform Taiwan
into a shining pearl as well as a treasure island in the new Pacific
century.

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