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A HakkaHakka ( Chinese: ; pinyin: keji, literal meaning "guest families") are a Han Chinese people whose ancestors are said to originate from around Henan and Shanxi in northern China over twenty seven hundred years ago. Their ancestors migrated southwards becau, Lee Teng-hui was born in Sanchih , near TaipeiAlternative meaning: Taipei County Taipei City City flag City logo City nickname: the City of Azaleas Capital District Xinyi Area Total % water Ranked 16 of 25 271. 0% Population Total ( May, 2004) Density Ranked 2 of 25 2,625,512 9,660/km² Districts:12 M, Taiwan when the island was part of the Japanese Empire. Growing up under JapanJapan (, Nippon/Nihon literally "the origin of the sun") is a country in East Asia situated on a chain of islands east of the Asian continent on the western edge of the Pacific Ocean. The largest of these islands are, from north to south, Hokkaido , Honshese rule, he developed an affinity for Japan. Lee—one of only four Taiwanese students in his high school class—graduated with honors and was given a scholarship to Japan's prestigious Kyoto Imperial University.
After World War II, with Taiwan now under KMT control, Lee enrolled in the National Taiwan University, where in 1948, he earned a bachelor's degree in agricultural science. A devout Marxist in his teens, Lee joined the Communist Party of China in September 1946, but quit two years later. He participated in the February 28 Incident during this time.[1] According to historian Li Ao, Lee sold out his comrades before joining Kuomintang later, as the Communists who associated with Lee were all executed by the government. The KMT was aware that Lee had been a Communist, but destroyed the records when he was promoted to the vice presidency. Lee himself admitted that he was a communist in a 2002 interview, but declined to comment whether he was a traitor. Lee stated that he joined out of hatred of the KMT. [2]
In 1953, Lee received a master's degree in agricultural economics from the Iowa State University in the United States. Lee subsequently returned to Taiwan as an economist with the Joint Commission on Rural Reconstruction (JCRR), an institution sponsored by the U.S. and aimed at modernizing Taiwan's agricultural system and at land reform.
In the mid- 1960s Lee returned to the United States, and earned a Ph.D in agricultural economics from Cornell University in 1968.