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About The Book
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<p>Recently occupied by the Nationalist Chinese regime Taiwan in early 1947 was a powder keg. Anger at the corrupt misrule of the new government erupted into protests and riots which quickly became an island-wide uprising. The response from the Nationalists was brutal and overwhelming &ndash; a weeks-long massacre in which local leaders and intellectuals were systematically slaughtered. Estimates of the dead range from ten thousand to thirty thousand. The killings became known as the &ldquo;228 Massacre&rdquo; the &ldquo;228 Incident&rdquo; or simply &ldquo;228&rdquo; after the date of the first riots (February 28).</p><p>Allan J. Shackleton was a New Zealand officer with the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration assigned to in Taiwan at the time. His eyewitness account of the massacre is an important document for&nbsp;understanding modern Taiwan&rsquo;s founding tragedy. Shackleton tried for years to get it published but it was deemed too politically sensitive during the Cold War when &ldquo;Free China&rdquo; was an ally of the Western world. Finally after Taiwan&rsquo;s first democratic presidential election Shackleton&rsquo;s son was approached by a publisher and the first edition appeared in 1998 fifty years after it was written.</p><p>This Camphor Press edition has been reset and carries a number of&nbsp;minor corrections to the 1998 edition.</p>