The Council of Indigenous Peoples yesterday announced the schedule for an upcoming festival that will feature songs and dance from Aboriginal cultures in Taiwan and more than 10 other countries.
As part of the Republic of China’s centennial celebrations, the Global Indigenous Peoples Performing Arts Festival will include seven local groups. Twelve other groups will converge from around the world to perform.
Three major performances will take place between July 27 and Aug. 3 in Hualien County, Taipei City and Pingtung County.
Photo: CNA
At the press conference held to announce the festival, a dancer from Peru’s CIDAN Mi Peru wowed those in attendance with her moves when she danced in a colorful traditional woman warrior’s outfit. The group will present traditional rituals from Peru’s coastal, highland and jungle areas.
The troupes that were invited to perform at the festival come from as far as Chile, Gambia, Niger and New Zealand, the Council of Indigenous Peoples said.
“We all know Taiwan’s Aborigines are definitely part of a family with people in the South Pacific,” Council of Indigenous Peoples Minister Sun Ta-chuan (孫大川) said.
Sun said Aboriginal people around the world were connected by a similarly “miserable experience” during periods of colonization.
“These people, however, have not given up the essence of their own cultures, so we invited them here,” Sun said.
An official from Taiwan’s Puyuma tribe said he hoped the audience would appreciate not only the performances at the festival, but also the feeling of experiencing their heritage.
To deepen the visitors’ understanding of local Aboriginal culture, tours to three Aboriginal communities in Hualien and Pingtung will be offered.
Sun said it was not common for a large event such as this festival to have interaction between the participants and local communities. Trips to the communities will include visits to traditional Aboriginal arts industry and cultural centers.
Taipei and New Taipei City government officials are aiming to have the first phase of the Wanhua-Jungho-Shulin Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) line completed and opened by 2027, following the arrival of the first train set yesterday. The 22km-long Light Green Line would connect four densely populated districts in Taipei and New Taipei City: Wanhua (萬華), Jhonghe (中和), Tucheng (土城) and Shulin (樹林). The first phase of the project would connect Wanhua and Jhonghe districts, with Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall and Chukuang (莒光) being the terminal stations. The two municipalities jointly hosted a ceremony for the first train to be used
MILITARY AID: Taiwan has received a first batch of US long-range tactical missiles ahead of schedule, with a second shipment expected to be delivered by 2026 The US’ early delivery of long-range tactical ballistic missiles to Taiwan last month carries political and strategic significance, a military source said yesterday. According to the Ministry of National Defense’s budget report, the batch of military hardware from the US, including 11 sets of M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) and 64 MGM-140 Army Tactical Missile Systems, had been scheduled to be delivered to Taiwan between the end of this year and the beginning of next year. However, the first batch arrived last month, earlier than scheduled, with the second batch —18 sets of HIMARS, 20 MGM-140 missiles and 864 M30
Representative to the US Alexander Yui delivered a letter from the government to US president-elect Donald Trump during a meeting with a former Trump administration official, CNN reported yesterday. Yui on Thursday met with former US national security adviser Robert O’Brien over a private lunch in Salt Lake City, Utah, with US Representative Chris Stewart, the Web site of the US cable news channel reported, citing three sources familiar with the matter. “During that lunch the letter was passed along, and then shared with Trump, two of the sources said,” CNN said. O’Brien declined to comment on the lunch, as did the Taipei
A woman who allegedly attacked a high-school student with a utility knife, injuring his face, on a Taipei metro train late on Friday has been transferred to prosecutors, police said yesterday. The incident occurred near MRT Xinpu Station at about 10:17pm on a Bannan Line train headed toward Dingpu, New Taipei City police said. Before police arrived at the station to arrest the suspect, a woman surnamed Wang (王) who is in her early 40s, she had already been subdued by four male passengers, one of whom was an off-duty Taipei police officer, police said. The student, 17, who sustained a cut about