Taiwanese singer Na Tang (坣娜), who was also a prominent figure in the Jewish community in Taiwan, has died at the age of 59, her musician friend Tommy Chi (季忠平) said yesterday.
"With a song we collaborated on, praying for [your] peaceful return to the world of the Lord," Chi wrote on Facebook. "My tears are as hot as the aches of the heart."
Tang's passing was first reported earlier yesterday by TVBS News, which said she had died on Oct. 16.
 
                    Photo courtesy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
CNA has been unable to reach Tang's assistants to obtain any further details about her death.
Tang, cofounder of the Jeffrey D. Schwartz NaTang Jewish Taiwan Cultural Association (JTCA), made her last personal Facebook post on June 8.
When news of her passing broke, her Facebook page was flooded with tributes.
One of the posts featured a video of Tang singing the Jewish prayer "Avinu Malkeinu" (Our Father, Our King). The video was first released on her YouTube channel five years ago.
Tang was a well-known public figure in Taiwan, with careers as a singer, actress and yoga instructor.
In the international community in Taiwan, she was best known as a patron of the JTCA, a non-profit organization that she cofounded with her husband Jeffrey D. Schwartz.
Through the association, the couple established the Jeffrey D. Schwartz Jewish Community Center (JCC) in Taipei in December 2021 to serve the Jewish community in Taiwan and provide information to others interested in Jewish culture and religion.
The JCC hosts Taiwan's first synagogue, a museum and a Jewish ritual pool called a mikveh, which is used for purification and spiritual cleansing.
Tang and Schwartz also established the Kosher Culinary Lab to promote kosher cuisine in Taiwan.
In the early 2000s, Tang stepped away from the entertainment industry, citing the lingering effects of a devastating car accident in 1993.
She took up yoga, which she said became a lifestyle and a means of rehabilitation from injuries she sustained in the accident.
She later published several books about yoga, becoming the first Taiwanese celebrity to do so, and she occasionally made cameo appearances on screen and on stage throughout the years.
Her discography includes fan favorites such as Longing For Love (奢求) and Freedom (自由).
She has also appeared in films like Clash of the Professionals (闖將) and the TV drama Pearl Love (還君明珠).
Tang is survived by her husband.

The German city of Hamburg on Oct. 14 named a bridge “Kaohsiung-Brucke” after the Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung. The footbridge, formerly known as F566, is to the east of the Speicherstadt, the world’s largest warehouse district, and connects the Dar-es-Salaam-Platz to the Brooktorpromenade near the Port of Hamburg on the Elbe River. Timo Fischer, a Free Democratic Party member of the Hamburg-Mitte District Assembly, in May last year proposed the name change with support from members of the Social Democratic Party and the Christian Democratic Union. Kaohsiung and Hamburg in 1999 inked a sister city agreement, but despite more than a quarter-century of

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) yesterday expressed “grave concerns” after Singaporean Prime Minister Lawrence Wong (黃循財) reiterated the city-state’s opposition to “Taiwanese independence” during a meeting with Chinese Premier Li Qiang (李強). In Singapore on Saturday, Wong and Li discussed cross-strait developments, the Singaporean Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement. “Prime Minister Wong reiterated that Singapore has a clear and consistent ‘one China’ policy and is opposed to Taiwan independence,” it said. MOFA responded that it is an objective fact and a common understanding shared by many that the Republic of China (ROC) is an independent, sovereign nation, with world-leading

The Ministry of Justice Investigation Bureau (MJIB) has been investigating nine shell companies working with Prince Holding Group, and the Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office is seeking further prosecution of alleged criminals, a source said yesterday. The nine companies and three Taiwanese nationals were named by the US Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) on Oct. 14 as Specially Designated Nationals as a result of a US federal court indictment. Prince Holding founder Chen Zhi (陳志) has been charged with fraud, conspiracy, money laundering and overseeing Prince Holding’s suspected forced-labor camps in Cambodia, the indictment says. Intelligence shared between Taiwan,

COOLING OFF: Temperatures are expected to fall to lows of about 20°C on Sunday and possibly 18°C to 19°C next week, following a wave of northeasterly winds on Friday The Central Weather Administration (CWA) on Sunday forecast more rain and cooler temperatures for northern Taiwan this week, with the mercury dropping to lows of 18°C, as another wave of northeasterly winds sweeps across the country. The current northeasterly winds would continue to affect Taiwan through today, with precipitation peaking today, bringing increased rainfall to windward areas, CWA forecaster Liu Pei-teng (劉沛滕) said. The weather system would weaken slightly tomorrow before another, stronger wave arrives on Friday, lasting into next week, Liu said. From yesterday to today, northern Taiwan can expect cool, wet weather, with lows of 22°C to 23°C in most areas,