Human beings are made for and of liberty. When they lose it, they need a road to recover it—including in Taiwan.
Tai Ji Men
What Taiwan Can Learn from Mandela
The South African leader admitted his mistakes and learned from his errors—something that seems more difficult in the Taiwanese context.
Scholars Discuss Tai Ji Men’s “Road to Freedom”
On Nelson Mandela day, experts and Tai Ji Men dizi discussed freedom, transitional justice, and the fight for human rights.
The Unasked Question in the Tai Ji Men Case: What Do We Mean by the Law?
The laws (plural) exist to affirm the supreme law (singular) of justice. They failed to do so in the case of Tai Ji Men.
The Spectacularization of Justice and the Tai Ji Men Case
When criminal cases become a show and prosecutors manipulate the media, the human rights of the defendants are irreparably affected.
15th Anniversary of Tai Ji Men’s Legal Victory Celebrated
On July 13, 2007, the Supreme Court of Taiwan found Dr. Hong and his co-defendants innocent of all charges. But the Tai Ji Men case continued.
A Short Explanation of the Tai Ji Men Case
Read by Rebecca Wang, a Tai Ji Men dizi (disciple), on July 18, 2022, during the webinar “Tai Ji Men: The Road to Freedom,” and forwarded to international leaders in the religious liberty field.
Effective Parliamentarism and the Tai Ji Men Case
The Tai Ji Men case is a distressing example of Taiwan’s failure to live up to its democratic promises.
Parliamentarism and Human Rights: The French Example and the Tai Ji Men Case
French history proves that countries with democratically elected Parliaments can nonetheless abuse human rights. This is true for Taiwan, too.
Parliamentarism and Human Rights: The “New” Transitional Justice and the Tai Ji Men Case
Several countries have recognized that democratically elected Parliaments and serious human rights violations may unfortunately coexist.









