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Lunatic-- Li Ao
Li Ao is perhaps one of the most rebellious
idealists in the world. All together he has wrote over 100 books, of which 96
are banned. The outspoken talent likes to portray himself with American idealist
Eugene Victor Debs's sentences: While there is a lower class I am in it; while
there is a criminal element I am of it; while there is a soul in prison I am not
free.
Li Ao was born in the city of Harbin
in North China's Heilongjiang
Province in 1935 before moving with his family to Taiwan
Province in 1949.
In high school, Li was a star student. However, the prodigy suspended his
schooling in his senio year -- he was disgusted with the "suffocating"
education. Years later, he enrolled in Taiwan
University and studied Law and History. After graduation, he served as a reserve
officer for one and a half years. Then he went back to the university to study
in the History Research Institute. But he soon decided to drop out before ending
up as a scholar, and the "lunatic," as he became known, began writing articles
revealing the dark side of the school and was not happy about studying there any
more.
Starting in the 1960s, Li Ao served as editor-in-chief of the magazine
Wenxing, which promoted democracy and personal freedom. He was credited for his
contribution to the democratic movement at that time in Taiwan, but his audacity
infuriated the authorities. His tirades eventually landed him in prison for over
8 years.
At the age of 44, Li again flung himself in the battle against the
authorities with even more bitter diatribes. As a result, he was put in jail
again; despite this, the fighter was still unwilling to compromise. He wrote
books and articles in his jail cell, exposing the ill treatment by the prison
officers and the unfair judicial
system. He wrote at an amazing rate-for ten consecutive years he wrote one
book per month on average without interruption.
This is Li Ao, the most rebellious idealists in China.
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