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Ep 208 | Dr. Wilma Welsh: How the Presbyterian Church in Taiwan Became the Voice of the People in the 1970s

Ep 208 | Dr. Wilma Welsh: How the Presbyterian Church in Taiwan Became the Voice of the People in the 1970s

Episode 208 Published 3 years, 7 months ago
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https://talkingtaiwan.com/dr-wilma-welsh-how-the-presbyterian-church-of-taiwan-became-the-voice-of-the-people-in-the-1970s-ep-208/

A note from Talking Taiwan host Felicia Lin:

When Wilma Welsh left Canada to work with the Presbyterian Church in Taiwan (PCT) in 1969, she told me that it changed her life.

Little did she know how she'd be a part of the pivotal role that the PCT would play as a voice for the people of Taiwan. During her time in Taiwan, Wilma experienced the Kuomintang's surveillance and censorship, and felt the lingering impact of the 228 massacre which happened on February 28, 1947.

She was the English secretary to Reverend Kao Chun-ming, the General Secretary of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in Taiwan. When Taiwan's international status and the fate Taiwan's people came in to question Reverend Kao and others wrote the Public Statement on Our National Fate, Wilma typed it up and took it out of Taiwan to Hong Kong where it could be safely mailed out. She also recounted how she was working at the Bible Society in Taipei in 1975 when the Kuomintang arrived to confiscate Taiwanese Hoklo language versions of the Bible and ended up smuggling out 2 copies of the Bible.

In 2006 she became the Moderator of the 132nd General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in Canada. She was the first lay person to ever hold this position. In 2010 she was by the bestowing of a Doctor of Divinity Degree (DD) from Knox College, the University of Toronto. During her year as Moderator she received three additional honors, a life membership in the Women's Missionary Society, the Mahatma Gandhi Peace Medal, and an honorary membership in the World Taiwanese Christian Association.

This episode of Talking Taiwan has been sponsored by NATWA, the North America Taiwanese Women's Association.

NATWA was founded in 1988, and its mission is:

  1. to evoke a sense of self-esteem and enhance women's dignity,
  2. to oppose gender discrimination and promote gender equality,
  3. to fully develop women's potential and encourage their participation in public affairs,
  4. to contribute to the advancement of human rights and democratic development in Taiwan,
  5. to reach out and work with women's organizations worldwide to promote peace for all.

To learn more about NATWA visit their website: www.natwa.com

Here's a little preview of what we talked about in this podcast episode:

  • Wilma's early involvement with the Presbyterian Church
  • What brought Wilma to Formosa (as Taiwan was known then) to work with the Presbyterian Church in Taiwan
  • Wilma's parents' reaction to her going to Taiwan
  • What Wilma was doing before she went to Taiwan
  • What Wilma knew about Taiwan before she went there
  • The language training that Wilma did before going to Taiwan
  • Wilma's first impressions of Taiwan
  • How Wilma first worked with M.C. Chong
  • How Wilma work for Dr. Kao (Reverend Kao Chun-ming)
  • How Taiwan was under martial law and Wilma had to beware of informers
  • The censorship of postal mail coming from Taiwan
  • Wilma's work with Dr. Kao
  • How she worked half a day on Wednesdays at the Bible Society
  • How it was not safe for Dr. Kao to speak with Wilma about certain things in the office because there were planted informants in the office
  • How the Taiwanese were afraid of the Kuomintang since the 228 Massacre had happened
  • How she burned documents that Dr. Kao didn
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