We are very pleased to have a guest post from Joan Druett, who recently visited Taiwan. Joan is the multi-award winning author of more than 20 books, including her latest, Lady Castaways and Eleanor’s Odyssey.
A priority for anyone from the Pacific who visits Taiwan is the Shung-Ye Museum of Formosan Aborigines. After all, it is now both scientifically and popularly believed that the greatest migration of seafarers in history — the discovery and settlement of the islands of the Pacific — began in Taiwan. It was from the east coast of this mountainous island off the coast of mainland China that the people we now call Polynesians set out on their epic voyages. Our New Zealand Maori are distant cousins of the Formosan Aborigines, with a great deal in common, both in appearance and in personality. There are echoes of the local language in Maori te reo.