Member of Political Persecution:Chen He’s Life Story

碩士 === 國立臺南大學 === 文化與自然資源學系碩士班 === 103 === Chen He (1904-1990) was Jian Ji’s wife. Her husband was not only the leader of Taiwan peasant-movement in the Japanese colonial period, but also a victim of White Terror. However, many members of Taiwan peasant-movement including Jain Ji were arrested and s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: LAN,PIN-CHI, 籃品琪
Other Authors: CHIU,LI-JUAN
Format: Others
Language:zh-TW
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/12491049768421532188
Description
Summary:碩士 === 國立臺南大學 === 文化與自然資源學系碩士班 === 103 === Chen He (1904-1990) was Jian Ji’s wife. Her husband was not only the leader of Taiwan peasant-movement in the Japanese colonial period, but also a victim of White Terror. However, many members of Taiwan peasant-movement including Jain Ji were arrested and sentenced in the 2-12 incident; even lots of people suffered or were died through the 2-28 incident and the White terror. Therefore, this study makes use of «Jian Ji’s prison diary », oral history and other materials to explain and discuss Chen He’s life experiences. The main purpose of this study is to realize the role in family and society of a political victim’s wife who suffered through Taiwan peasant-movement in Japanese colonial period and White Terror, and her inner characteristics, adaptation and changes when she confronted political persecution. Accordingly, this study found the fact that females always can take up the heavy responsibility when males cannot earn their livelihood. Chen He held an important position in her family and nurtured her children hardly under the government surveillance, mental pressure and social discrimination; besides, she never stopped helping the poor even though she has already dropped in the plight. Consequently, her religion—Buddhism let her forget sadness to live unflinchingly and then be absorbed in Buddhist practice assiduously in her late life.