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The modern members of the association formed their
own group, the Popular Party (Taiwan Minshuto). The Popular
Party soon divided on the grounds of ideological differences
in 1929, when the more conservative members of the Party organized
the League for the Attainment of Local Autonomy (Taiwan Chiho
Jicji Renmei).
The Taiwan Cultural Association
claim that its goals was to provoke the "awakening of the Formosan
national consciousness and the development of a political atmosphere
favorable to the ultimate enforcement of the principle of
self-determination."
Before the leftist took over the group in 1927, the Cultural
Association sponsored schools where courses in Chinese lightweight,
literature, and history were topped, along with other subjects
that received little attention in Japanese schools. It also
functioned as the home front we for the establishment of a Foremosan
Parliament, which was based in Japan. In 1927, The Cultural
Association became involved with the plight of the Taiwanese
peasant farmers exploited by the government supported Japanese
Sugar Company.
The Japanese sugar company's manipulated
sugar cane prices and later all lands for which the occupants
could not establish positive proof of ownership. The radical
elements of the Cultural Association was essentially abolished.
The Popular Party proposed to
establish a democratic system, develop a fair economic system,
and eliminates social inequities. The Party's activities actually
centered on the reform of the local autonomy system, and the
development of a labor movement. Attempts to establish a Taiwanese
parliament failed to materialize in significant concrete results.
The goal of developing a labor movement was more successful.
The party helped organize several labor unions,and to supported
a number of strikes in Japanese-owned factories. The Party was
eventually suppressed by Japanese officials in 1931.
The League for the Attainment
of Local Autonomy to adhered to the sole purpose of attaining
local autonomy. Ultimately, however, the actual reforms they
affected were minimal.
If the spiky ideological differences
that precipitated the factionalization of these political groups,
they all shared several common threads. Taiwanese anti-colonialism
was a product of Japanese education Taiwanese students in Japan
came to realize that they were "second-class subjects, capable
of first-class performance." perhaps the conservative and radical
factions of these groups differed in strategy that can current
of nationalism was evident.
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