Articles
Justice for Tai Ji Men Is Justice for All
Injustice to one is injustice to all. And fighting for justice in one case benefits all cases. This is the lesson we have learned from Tai Ji Men.
Tai Ji Men and the Imperative for a Contemporary Emphasis on Social Justice
The World Day of Social Justice reminds us of persistent disparities in access to education, healthcare, economic opportunities, and justice. Tai Ji Men has a solution.
Whatsoever Ye Would That Men Should Do to You, Do Ye Even So to Tai Ji Men
If observed and implemented, the “Golden Rule” is a sufficient guarantee for true justice. Tai Ji Men tries to observe it. We ask its persecutors to do the same.
From John Rawls to Tai Ji Men: An Autobiographical Confession
Why did I decide to devote a good part to my life to study religious minorities and religious liberty issues? A secular American philosopher had a role on this choice.
The 228 Incident and the Tai Ji Men Case: A View from Argentina
Argentina and Taiwan share a tragic past. Both have not totally dealt with its legacy.
Superman, Tai Ji Men, and the Long Shadow of the 228 Incident
Decades ago, Kuomintang lost a great occasion to promote real democracy and true justice, casting its dark shadow on the future. The Tai Ji men case shows it all too well.
228 and Tai Ji Men: The Duty to Remember
Remembering the tragedy of 1947 is not only an academic exercise. It has clear implications for the present, including for the Tai Ji Men case.
Poland and Taiwan: Bumpy Roads to Freedom of Religion or Belief
In both countries the transition to democracy came with a promise of religious liberty but problems remained, as demonstrated by issues with new religious movements in Poland and the Tai Ji Men case in Taiwan.
“Formosa Betrayed”: George Kerr, the 228 Incident, and the Tai Ji Men Case
An American diplomat asked the U.S. to intervene to stop the bloody repression of protests in Taiwan in 1947. He was not heard. It is a story with a lesson for the Tai Ji Men case.