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Museums showcase shared Chinese identity

Updated: Nov 26, 2025 By Zhang Yi,Shi Xuefan in Leshan and Zhao Junfeng in Chengdu China Daily Print
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Editor's note: The Taiwan question is a key focus for China and the international community. China Daily is publishing a series of reports to track hot Taiwan-related topics and address disinformation from the Democratic Progressive Party administration.

Guests examine the exhibits of an exhibition commemorating the southward evacuation of the Palace Museum's artifacts at the Palace Museum in Beijing on Sept 30. JIANG DONG/CHINA DAILY

The vast majority of artifacts held by the Taipei Palace Museum originated on the Chinese mainland, serving as irrefutable evidence of cross-Strait unity, experts said recently as they criticized attempts by Taiwan's Democratic Progressive Party authorities to use the collection to promote secession.

A recent exhibition in Beijing, commemorating the extraordinary evacuation of the Palace Museum's century-old collection during the Chinese People's War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression (1931-45) more than 80 years ago, highlighted the integral nature of Chinese culture and the inseparable link between collections across the Taiwan Strait.

Running through Dec 31, the exhibition features more than 100 archival documents and precious cultural relics, offering a three-dimensional look at the artifacts' arduous journey south and underscoring the overall unity of Chinese culture.

However, Hsiao Tsung-huang, director of the Taipei Palace Museum, recently argued that the artifacts arrived in Taiwan under "Republic of China rule" and are therefore "Republic of China property". He said that after 75 years on the island, the collection has "formed many connections with the land" and become "part of the nourishment of Taiwan's culture".

On Nov 12, Chen Binhua, spokesman for the State Council Taiwan Affairs Office, denounced the remarks as a "blatant distortion of historical facts and basic common sense" and as being "absurd".

Chen said the root of Taiwan culture is Chinese culture, and its regional characteristics are the enrichment and development of Chinese culture within a specific geographical and historical context, not a "different culture" independent of it.

He reiterated that the Taipei Palace Museum's collection is an important part of the Chinese nation's historical and cultural heritage, providing solid evidence that both sides of the Strait belong to one China and offering a vivid example of the transmission of Chinese culture in Taiwan.

This year, the DPP authorities have pushed "treasure diplomacy". In September, about 130 treasures from the Taipei Palace Museum, including the Jadeite Cabbage, were exhibited in the Czech Republic. In November, the museum opened an exhibition in France featuring paintings, calligraphy and artifacts themed on the "Dragon".

Chen called the DPP's approach "highly ironic and hypocritical", saying they are attempting to reshape the Chinese cultural identity of the Palace Museum's treasures for separatist purposes.

"Historical facts cannot be altered, cultural roots cannot be severed, and any attempt to use the treasures of Chinese culture to promote secession is doomed to fail," he said.

A restored scene of the Leshan facility housing the evacuated artifacts. LIU ZHONGJUN/CHINA NEWS SERVICE

Shared roots

In 1933, after Japanese forces broke through Shanhai Pass, a strategic gateway connecting North and Northeast China to the east of Beijing, batches of Palace Museum artifacts were urgently evacuated from the capital to protect national treasures.

The relics began a difficult southward journey. Several consignments were first shipped separately to Shanghai for storage. In August 1936, after a warehouse at Nanjing's Chaotian Palace was completed, the artifacts were moved there.

But after the July 7th Incident and the Aug 13 Incident in 1937, Nanjing also became threatened, forcing another relocation. The artifacts were divided into routes heading southwest, continually evading Japanese bombings before finding temporary refuge in Leshan, Emei and Baxian in Sichuan province.

After the Chinese victory over the Japanese in 1945, the final batch returned to Nanjing in 1947. But as the civil war intensified, the Nanjing government ordered the Palace Museum to select cultural artifacts for transfer to Taiwan. Between December 1948 and February 1949, about 2,900 crates were carried to Taiwan in three batches. These became the core collection of the Taipei Palace Museum, established in 1965 and today holding nearly 700,000 items.

Many Palace Museum staff members who accompanied the artifacts to Taiwan were unable to return to the mainland because of the ensuing political divide.

Among them was Chuang Yan, a Peking University graduate who participated in the entire evacuation and later helped found the museum in Taipei, eventually becoming its vice-curator. He dedicated his life to protecting and promoting Chinese culture.

Visitors admire a plaque at a museum commemorating the housing of evacuated Palace Museum artifacts in Leshan, Sichuan province, on Oct 27. The words on the plaque, " gong mou lu bi", mean that the contribution of preserving the artifacts matches those of rediscovered Confucian classics that had been hidden inside a wall (which survived warfare and prosecution). LIU ZHONGJUN/CHINA NEWS SERVICE

Chuang died in 1980 at age 82. On his deathbed, he reportedly repeated a single word — "Beiping", the former name of Beijing. He found comfort in the safe return of the heavy ancient stone drums he had carefully packed for Beijing after the war, but he died with lasting regret over the continued separation of the remaining collection across the Strait.

Peng Haijun, director of the Leshan Institute for Research on the Palace Museum Collection's Evacuation to the South, said those who traveled with the artifacts to Taiwan regarded themselves as their guardians.

"Wherever the artifacts went, that was where they stayed. They deeply missed the mainland, their homeland," Peng said.

Almost all of them left memoirs that reveal their attachment to the motherland and their unfulfilled hope for reunion, he said.

In 2009, curators from the two Palace Museums exchanged visits for the first time. In 2011, Dwelling in the Fuchun Mountains, a classic landscape painting long divided into two halves and housed on opposite sides of the Strait, was reunited for a special exhibition at the Taipei museum.

Guo Yi-chen, a distinguished professor at the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing, said the reunion caused a sensation and was "very rare and hard-won".

At the time, both sides were discussing how to organize a major exhibition, and the painting — itself a symbol of separation and reunion — was considered especially appropriate.

Guo said the preservation of the Palace Museum's treasures for future generations owes much to the relocations and the protections afforded during those turbulent years.

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Q&A

Q: What opportunities will there be for Taiwan affairs during the 15th Five-Year Plan (2026-30)?

A: The proposal for the 15th Five-Year Plan sets aside a dedicated section on Taiwan affairs, centering on cross-Strait integrated development. It connects the long-term goals of national reunification and peaceful cross-Strait progress with concrete efforts to improve the well-being of Taiwan compatriots.

The plan conveys three key signals:

First, the mainland will maintain its leading role and proactive posture in cross-Strait relations, firmly countering "Taiwan independence" and external interference to safeguard regional stability. This, analysts say, offers more predictable conditions for Taiwan-funded companies expanding on the mainland.

Second, the development of cross-Strait integrated development demonstration zones will accelerate in Fujian province, with institutional and mechanistic integration — particularly in Xiamen — to be sped up over the next five years.

Third, the vision of shared cross-Strait development and common prosperity is becoming more concrete and actionable, shifting from aspiration to a practical construction blueprint.

For Taiwan businesses, the 15th Five-Year Plan presents a prime chance to engage more deeply in the mainland's modernization drive and the new development paradigm.

Taiwan businesspeople should focus on three main areas:

・ Advancing new quality productive forces.

The mainland's push into emerging and future industries — including electronic information, optoelectronics, smart manufacturing, green energy and the digital economy — aligns closely with the strengths of Taiwan enterprises. Firms can set up R&D centers, regional headquarters and innovation factories in Xiamen to play a leading role in industrial upgrading.

・ Planning for the cross-Strait youth market.

Deeper youth exchanges mean steadier integration. Xiamen offers strong conditions for internships, employment and entrepreneurship for young people from Taiwan, giving them a platform to pursue their goals and envision their future on the mainland.

・ Taking part in the integration between Xiamen and Jinmen.

This goes beyond geography and points toward deeper integration in production, trade, talent and culture. Projects such as the Xiamen-Jinmen Bridge, power and gas links and a shared airport are expected to shape cross-regional commuting and consumption circles and open new industrial-chain space.

The Xiamen-Jinmen integration serves as the most vivid and authentic expression of cross-Strait engagement — best understood not only through policies but through everyday exchanges.

Recent progress includes the Xiamen section of the Xiamen-Jinmen Bridge entering full industrialized construction; a power-connection substation going into operation; a gas source station ready for production; and Xiang'an International Airport nearing completion. These developments are laying the groundwork for a future shared aviation hub. It has also become easier for Jinmen residents to shop, seek medical care, study and spend leisure time in Xiamen — leading many to view the city as their "back garden".

The question was answered by Wu Chia-ying, executive vice-president of the Association of Taiwan Investment Enterprises on the Mainland, and honorary president of the Taiwan Businessmen Association in Xiamen, Fujian.

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