Why Such Haste to Cook and Eat Me, China? Cao Zhi’s Seven-Step Poem and Taiwan for Peace, not Pees 

Written by Sheng-mei Ma. This essay mobilises Cao Zhi’s seven-step poem as an allegorical lens on cross-Strait tensions, tracing how fraternal violence, de-personalised poetics, and classical Chinese cosmology illuminate Taiwan’s precarious geopolitics. Interweaving “Romance of the Three Kingdoms” and “Journey to the West”, it critiques power, survival, and moral contamination, arguing that domination ultimately inscribes both victim and victor within enduring cycles of violence.

Our Small but Persistent Steps for Peace

Written by ChuChun Yu and Tiffany Jan. This article shares how the Lung Yingtai Cultural Foundation advances the thinking from peacebuilding in Taiwan amid rising geopolitical tension. Reframing peace highlights dialogue, education, and grassroots initiatives as practical tools. Peace emerges not as an abstraction but as an everyday civic practice sustaining resilience, empathy, and democratic life.

Learning Across Borders: Taiwan, Gaza, and My Responsibility in an Unequal Reality

Written by Roi Silbeberg. This essay traces an encounter between Taiwan’s White Terror memory and the unfolding devastation in Gaza to argue that peacebuilding must confront asymmetries of power, not obscure them. Moving across intergroup dialogue, identity formation, and international responsibility, it insists that silence sustains violence, and that ethical clarity, political engagement, and global accountability are conditions for any meaningful future.

Living on the Frontline: What Kinmen and Gaza Teach About Peace Under Continuous Threat

Written by Hazem Almassry. Visiting Kinmen, a Taiwanese frontline-turned-tourist site, the author reflects on living under continuous threat, comparing it to Gaza. Both challenge conventional ideas of peace as post-conflict stability, revealing instead how people adapt to enduring militarisation and structural violence, in which “peace” often means managing rather than resolving ongoing conditions.

1 2 3 278