Taiwan's legendary elephant Lin Wang is fondly remembered
2003-04-07 / Taiwan News, Staff Reporter / By Larry East
Taiwanese fans of legendary elephant Lin Wang read posters erected at the Taipei Zoo with a life story and war history of the elephant, which died on February 26 this year of heart failure at the age of 86. More than 500,000 Taiwanese have paid their last respects to the elephant. (DPA) No one in Taiwan enjoys the popularity Lin Wang had. Not even incumbent President Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) or Taipei's charismatic mayor Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九). The elephant Lin Wang (林旺) was simply unique. Shortly after his death on February 26 at the age of 86, the mayor finally bestowed honorary citizenship on him. Chinese troops took the elephant prisoner in Burma during World War II and later sent him to China and Taiwan: "Grandpa Lin Wang," as the elephant was fondly known, was the island's icon. After the news of his death, more than 500,000 Taiwanese have flocked to Taipei Zoo to pay their last respects to the octogenarian. Yellow ribbons were tied around trees. Countless white lilies and yellow chrysanthemums have been placed outside the empty enclosure. "I can't believe he was gone. How could he? He was the zoo. He should be there forever," cried Chen Lan-li, a housewife who had rushed to the zoo. Heavyweights of political parties temporarily set aside their rivalry to mourn Lin Wang's death, who had outlived several luminaries of the past five decades. On a wreath sent to the zoo, Taiwanese President Chen wrote: "For Lin Wang, a friend forever." Another wreath from Mayor Ma bore the inscription: "Thank you for accompanying us in the past half century." In a memorial ceremony at the zoo, the mayor said: "Lin Wang had become an icon to four generations of people in Taiwan. When I was a child, my parents took me to see Lin Wang. When I became a father, I took my daughters to see him." Having survived World War II and the Chinese civil war, Lin Wang had become a legend during his lifetime. "At 26, Lin Wang was the youngest of all 13 elephants we had seized from the Japanese troops in the jungle of Burma, where they dragged army cannon and supplies for the former Japanese imperial army," said war veteran Yang Yi-li. The 30th Division of the Chinese New Army One was ordered to reinforce the British colonial government in Burma in 1943 when Japan attacked Pearl Harbour. General Sun Li-jen, the rising star of the then Chinese Nationalist government, defeated the Japanese troops and imprisoned the elephants in 1943, according to Chinese military history archives. "The elephants later joined our force and had once formed a make- shift bridge to help us cross a river to attack the Japanese troops," recalled Yang. Lin Hua-ching, general curator of Taipei Zoo, said Sun and his expedition force were recalled to China in April 1945. Sun's superior instructed that the elephants be taken along. "As the elephants were unable to board the plane, they had to go by way of the rough roads linking Burma and the southwestern Chinese province of Yunan," said Lin. "Only seven survived the tough journey as the weather was hot, the barren mountain rocks cut into the swollen feet of the elephants and the feed was inadequate," he said. Six elephants died in 10 days. Sun later sent trucks to bring the other elephants to Kunming, the capital of Yunnan. There a decision was made to take the elephans to Guangzhou in the south which meant a 1,000-kilometer journey. They reached Guangzhou six months later. Four elephants were later sent to Beijing, Shanghai, Nanjing and Changsha respectively, while Lin Wang and two others stayed in Guangzhou. The Nationalist government, however, soon engaged in a civil war with the Chinese Communists, and Sun was ordered to train soldiers in Taiwan. In 1947, Gen Sun decided to take Lin Wang and its mate Ah Pei to Taiwan. A year later Ah Pei died. In 1954, Gen Sun gave Lin Wang to Taipei Zoo to mate him with a young female elephant Ma Lan, Lin said. "But Ma Lan was not interested as it was too young at that time. By the time it grew older, Lin Wang was no longer interested. So the couple never had children," Lin said. By the time of his death, Lin Wang had unconsciously become a treasured family member to many Taiwanese.