Guardian of Chinese Civilization
When I first arrived in Taiwan in the early 2000s, I was struck not by its politics but by its continuity. Living here, I experienced a civilization that had preserved its soul despite the turbulence of the 20th century. For decades, Taiwan has been framed as a geopolitical problem: a flashpoint between the U.S. and China, a line on a map, a question of missiles and maritime borders. That framing misses the deeper truth. Taiwan is not just a province or a bargaining chip; it is the last stronghold of authentic Chinese civilization, a culture I had only ever read about in books until I lived among it and witnessed its everyday rhythms, values, and resilience firsthand.
After the Chinese Civil War, the Communist Party (PRC) took control of mainland China, while the Kuomintang (KMT), the nationalist government, retreated to Taiwan with millions of people, including scholars, artists, and tens of thousands of historical artifacts. This migration brought with it traditional Chinese culture, education, and values, which could continue to flourish safely in Taiwan. Visiting the National Palace Museum, I felt the weight of history in the artifacts that had traveled across the Strait, objects carrying centuries of learning, art, and ethical thought. On the mainland, ideological campaigns, culminating in the Cultural Revolution, severed China from its classical moral, philosophical, and linguistic heritage. Simplified Chinese characters replaced traditional script, and centuries of scholarship and cultural practice were suppressed.
In Taiwan, by contrast, these traditions survived not as museum relics but as living elements of national life. Walking through its streets, observing its public spaces, and living among its people, it was clear that traditional Chinese characters, classical education, and ethical philosophy remain embedded in schooling, governance, and culture. Here, civilization did not retreat; it adapted. Any political absorption into the PRC would not restore cultural unity; it would annihilate it. Reunification would not be a return to cultural unity, it would be the surrender of it.
Freedom Preserves Civilization
Taiwan does more than preserve its heritage; it actively sustains and revitalizes it. The Cultural Heritage Preservation Act protects historical sites, manuscripts, and traditional arts, while the National Palace Museum in Taipei maintains over 600,000 artifacts brought from Beijing in 1949, ensuring this heritage remains accessible globally. These artifacts are not just historical relics; they are a living demonstration of Taiwan’s role as the custodian of Chinese civilization.
Universities still teach the Four Books and Five Classics, school curricula integrate Confucian, Taoist, and Buddhist philosophy, and the Ministry of Culture funds traditional opera, crafts, and calligraphy. The Indigenous Languages Development Act (2017) supports 16 Indigenous languages, demonstrating that a free Chinese civilization can accommodate diversity, a principle rooted in the ancient Hundred Schools of Thought.
Taiwan’s cultural preservation is itself a form of strategic power. Visitors, scholars, and artists who experience Taiwan carry back an understanding of a China that once was: pluralistic, humane, and intellectually vibrant. Its pluralism and democracy contrast sharply with the PRC’s cultural homogenization. Trust, transparency, and respect for knowledge underpin both governance and economic success, showing that prosperity flows from integrity rather than coercion.
The West’s Responsibility?
Taiwan faces real internal challenges. Younger generations, shaped by global modernity and distance from the mainland, sometimes feel disconnected from classical heritage. This creates opportunities for Beijing or pro-unification voices within Taiwan to frame reconciliation as a cultural duty, masking political surrender as historical continuity.
The Democratic Progressive Party, Taiwan’s ruling party, known for its pro-democracy and pro-independence stance, must act decisively: it should assert that authentic Chinese civilization can only survive in freedom. Taiwan’s democracy is the modern expression of ethical governance, rooted in the same moral traditions that once guided emperors and scholars. It is a living, pluralistic society, not a frozen relic of the past.
For the West, Taiwan’s survival is more than a regional security concern. It is a test of commitment to democracy, rule of law, and cultural integrity. The PRC’s insistence on the 1992 Consensus is a political trap. A future KMT victory could transform voluntary political surrender into cultural erasure, as Hong Kong has shown. Allowing Taiwan to fall would embolden authoritarian regimes worldwide and signal that moral conviction can be negotiated away.
Defending Civilization
Since 2016, I have been based in Taiwan permanently, deepening my engagement with its society and culture. For me, living here has been a daily lesson in how freedom sustains civilization. Taiwan’s streets, communities, and public life reveal that culture thrives not in isolation but in an environment of liberty and moral integrity. Preserving Taiwan requires a strategy that integrates culture, technology, and defense:
Deepen economic and technological partnerships, particularly in semiconductors, through joint investment and supply-chain resilience.
Expand defense collaboration with Japan and the U.S., focusing on cyber defense, drones, and missile interoperability. Japan, under Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, can accelerate regional defense integration.
Lead the cultural narrative, presenting Taiwan as the democratic guardian of authentic Chinese civilization, using traditional script and classical ethics.
Strengthen cultural diplomacy through academic exchange, exhibitions, and co-funded programs promoting democratic Chinese thought.
Taiwan’s defense is not merely an alliance commitment; it is a personal and global responsibility, a way to ensure that the wisdom, ethics, and creativity of a 5,000-year-old civilization continue to illuminate the world. Having witnessed the island over two decades, I can attest that Taiwan is more than a geopolitical asset: it is a living testament to what Chinese civilization can achieve in freedom.