READ THESE ARTICLES FROM “Korea JoonAng Daily”
“Learning to live with Freedom isn’t easy”
When North Koreans began fleeing their homes in the early 1990s, they received nationwide attention upon reaching the South. Television reports showed them at airports, wearing leis and waving awkwardly at the camera with unsure smiles.
But as their numbers swelled, they were no longer considered objects of interest but, instead, a problem to be dealt with. The South Korean government introduced laws related to defectors in 1997 and opened the Hanawon resettlement facility two years later.
The Korea JoongAng Daily was giv
en an exclusive look at Hanawon’s program for this series.
Learning to live with freedom isn’t that simple – INSIDE Korea JoongAng Daily
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Han Jae-suk, a 31-year-old North Korean defector, has endured an odyssey in her effort to resettle in South Korea. The journey has included living for a year and a half in the basement of the South Korean Consulate in Shenyang, China, and studying 12 hours a day in Seoul as part of her training for a new career. She has no regrets.
South Korea is facing a milestone - by next month, 20,000 North Koreans will have resettled in the South. And, with many in the South seeing unification as an inevitability, the government is taking steps to prepare for the expected stream of refugees.
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The KWB thinks that it is important for Korean Adoptees to understand the current situation, and the historical period when one was born, to fully understand the “WHY’s” of their being ‘given away for adoption’. Only by understanding both can we begin to sort out what pressures our parents, mothers, even birth family had to deal with. So many families have these ‘secrets’ that are known but just not talked about.
As Korea moves forward into the 21st Century they must deal with issues such as the prejudices of the majority of society towards “outsiders”. It was reported that by 2030 the percentage of outsiders of foreign citizenship will amount to TEN percent. The rising number of Multicultural/bi-racial children is also rising each year from Multicultural Marriages. Little by little Korea is facing these issues and hopefully will grow into acceptance. Laws can never change the hearts of man, but as the government works to help improve things, we do hope to see the day when society or most of them will also change their hearts.
The Korean War Baby hopes to see that day…but it may be after he is ‘gone’.
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