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The living conditions of mainlanders

Many mainlanders came to Taiwan Province in the early days, many of whom fled to Taiwan Province Province or chose to go to Taiwan Province Province during the Korean War.

Resettlement of these mainlanders became an important issue for the government that moved to Taiwan Province in the early days. At that time, the National Government regarded Taiwan Province Province as a revival base for counterattack against the mainland, and there was no long-term plan for the resettlement of ordinary mainlanders. Except for some government officials who live in official villas or senior public houses left by the Japanese, most of them are temporarily resettled, forming a special "family village" in Taiwan Province Province. However, the placement of family villages is temporary and not very strict.

After the 1990s, the government mostly transformed family villages into new-type national residences and carried out urban renewal. Today, the family village policy still has an impact on today's society. 1949 among mainland immigrants from Taiwan after the civil war, most of them are single young men soldiers, and fewer are women. Some of them have married children in mainland China, but most of them did not follow Yuan Pei to Taiwan Province, and only a few people can move their families to Taiwan Province. Therefore, many immigrant men faced marriage problems, and later many married local people.

However, due to government policies, some veterans have never been married, leaving them helpless in their later years. After the lifting of the ban on cross-strait open exchanges to visit relatives, a considerable number of veterans returned to the mainland to get married.