| 
 228 victim Pan Mu-chih commemorated 
in Chiayi 
 
By Lee Hsin-fang / Staff reporter 
 
  
Democratic Progressive Party 
Legislator Lee Chun-yi calls on his audience to learn from history and protect 
Taiwan’s sovereignty at a march commemorating the 228 Incident in Chiayi County 
yesterday. 
Photo: Wang Shan-yen, Taipei Times 
 
Vice President Vincent Siew (蕭萬長) 
yesterday paid tribute to a prominent victim of the 228 Massacre, Dr Pan Mu-chih 
(潘木枝), at a commemorative exhibition held to mark the 65th anniversary of his 
execution and to honor his dedication to the development of democracy in Taiwan. 
 
Joined by family members of victims of the 228 Massacre, Siew attended the 
memorial exhibition titled: “The burning incense stick: 65 years of memories of 
the late doctor Pan Mu-chih,” held by the Memorial Foundation of 228. 
 
Not long after the 228 Incident had begun, Pan conducted negotiations with 
Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) troops at Chiayi Airport on behalf of that 
city’s 228 Settlement Committee. However, he was detained by government troops 
during the negotiations and was executed in front of Chiayi Railway Station on 
Mar.25, 1947. 
 
The 228 Massacre refers to a bloody crackdown by KMT troops on an 
anti-government uprising that began on Feb. 27, 1947. 
 
“Doctor Pan was not only my life-saver, but my mentor,” Siew said in a memorial 
film for Pan titled Died for the people, died with honor (為市民而亡,身雖死猶榮), which 
premiered at the exhibition yesterday. 
 
Siew said Pan’s public execution left a lasting and a distressing memory because 
he had often received care from the doctor as a child. 
 
“My mother had once said to me that without doctor Pan, I might not have lived 
to adulthood. He was a kind man not only to me, but also to each and every one 
of his patients,” Siew said. 
 
Aside from his devotion to his patients, Pan also had been a key influence in 
Taiwan’s democratic development: He gave his life for Taiwan and for the people 
of Chiayi, Siew said. 
 
“To commemorate the selfless sacrifice of doctor Pan, we must move forward with 
Taiwan’s democratic development and set the nation on a better direction,” Siew 
said. 
 
The commemorative exhibition opened yesterday in the National 228 Memorial 
Museum and is scheduled to run through April 29. 
 
Translated by Stacy Hsu, Staff Writer 
 |