2008年12月31日水曜日

thoughts on kohyang 고향 (june, 2008)


i went to visit my halaboji & halmoni (grandpa & grandma)'s kohyang (hometown) with my parents and brothers this past week.
the trip was truly amazing for 2 significant meanings. one is to spend time with my family. all together for the first time in so many years since my brothers and I moved out long time ago and 2 of my brothers are now salarymen in Japan and hardly get any holidays. the last time I remember we managed to meet all together was at my cousin’s wedding last year, but for about 5 hours since my brothers had to go back to work right after the reception.
so, I was really excited about spending time with my parents and brothers for 3 days! It seemed almost impossible when my parents and I began planning the trip, but my salarymen brothers fortunately got days off from work and joined us in this amazing trip from Tokyo and Osaka.

the other was to visit my grandparents’ hometown.
since my grandpa had passed away before I was born (and even before my parents got married), my memory with 1st generation Zainichi Koreans is always associated with my grandma. I lived with her for about 15 years, but I was too young to understand why she was who she was. instead, my internalized racism against my own people made me see her as an old-fashioned uneducated Korean woman who I wished should have no connections with me.

it was not until I went to college and joined the Korean student organization when I learned about the history of Zainichi Koreans.
I learned how Koreans (were forced to) move to Japan during the colonial period and some of them ended up staying in Japan for one reason or another.

as for my grandma, right after the Korean peninsula was liberated from the Japanese rule, she started to devote herself in working for Chongryun (organization supported by DPRK), believing that the reunification will come any time soon. meanwhile, she also worked day and night to raise 6 children plus 1 niece who had lost her parents during the war.

although she never really talked about the hardship she had to go through verbally (partly because we did not have an universal language to communicate), I could still tell that she went through the tremendous difficulties by seeing her hands and her bent back.

since she was an active member of Chongryun and her first son was also working for the organization, she never had a chance to go back to her hometown, which was in a divided South. her parents (my great grandparents) also came to Japan during the colonial rule and lived in Kyoto (which I just found out about a week ago from my mom). Plus her brothers died in the Korean War. There seemed to be almost no reasons for her to go back to Korea. but I believed she wanted to go visit where she came from at least once before she died. who wouldn’t??? so, I decided. To bring her soul back. Back to where she was supposed to be. home coming after 50+ years. march 2004, 2 months after her death.
I wanted to send off her soul peacefully, so I didn’t tell anyone in my family and relatives that I was going. However, due to my limited knowledge of Korean and time there, I only managed to go to her hometown, but couldn’t identify the exact place she was from.

4 years later, I am in Seoul studying Korean. for 3 years in the states, where I found the pleasure in reading, writing, and thinking in English. I felt liberated in expressing myself in English, which de-colonized me from the way of thinking that the Japanese language had pressed on me.

my primary purpose of coming to Korea was to understand my halmoni deeper and thus feel closer to her through learning the language and culture that cultivated her. despite my expectation, the longer I lived in Seoul and the more I learned the kind of Korean taught in language schools, the farther I felt from my halmoni because she had probably never been to Seoul and she never spoke the Seoul dialect. My plan seemed to fail. I even regretted coming to Seoul. I thought I wasted the past 6 months.

Here comes the week of the family reunification and the visit to halaboji & halmoni’s kohyang. wow…what wonderful 3 days! my shitty level 3 Korean helped me communicate with relatives without having to ask for my parents’ help, which totally blew off my regret!
most importantly I was so happy that I was finally able to complete the unfinished business from 2004. it felt like that my halmoni actually brought me there, so I could feel free now. I could almost hear her saying “kweng cha na (it’s alright).”

2008年3月23日日曜日

보자기 pojagi: wrapping cloth















i got 보자기(pojagi) for my friend's wedding gift from 세로방 (serobang) in 인사동 (insa-dong).
http://www.konest.com/data/shop_mise_detail.html?no=1846

삼겹살 samgyupsal: three-layered pork















삼겹살 is one of my favorite koresn food. i had it in 2000 when i visited seoul for the first time in my life. i still remember how impressed i was! it's much cheaper than 불고기 (bulkogi) and still tasted as good, or maybe better. usually you roll it with veggies such as lettus or sesame leaves, but you can also roll it with a thin slice of 떡 (rice cake), which is called 떡쌈. the best 떡쌈 place i've been in seoul is probably 떡쌈시대 (
www.ttokssam.co.kr) in 종로. average wait time is like 20-30 min, but it's totally worth it!

2008年3月2日日曜日

karaoke contest 노래자랑대회

so, yonseil kli level has a karaoke contest that every class & everyone has to attend. our class picked 숫자송 (number song), a children's song just because it was easy and cute! see the link http://www.comicsong.com/play.php?win_w=1024&win_h=734&No=49

there are 20 classes (each class has about 12 students) in level 2 and we did not get any prize, but it was lots of fun practicing for the contest and most importantly we got to know each other
very well.

here are some pictures from the karaoke contest:


2008年2月26日火曜日

N Seoul Tower

my parents & little brother were in seoul this weekend and we did touristy stuff as it was my dad's & brother's first time in seoul.

last supper

설렁탕 (sul long tang) with roommates before i moved to a new place.


2008年2月18日月曜日

my little sisters

my little sisters in seoul!

김밥 kimpap

i went to 김밥전국 (kimpap chun kuk: kimpap heaven)almost everyday last week so grab super cheap 김밥 (1000won=little less than $1). "kim" means seaweed and "pap" means "rice," so it's like sushi roll, but without any fresh sashimi. there are about 10 kinds of kimpap there including kimchee, beef and cheeze. last time, i tried ordeing my dream kimpap, which is a regular kimpap + kimchee + beef, then roll with egg!!!!!! the kimpap lady there was hesitating at first, but as i kept asking, she said she'd make the special kimpap for 3000 won (about $2.75). doesn't it look yummy???















2008年2月17日日曜日

떡국 (ttuk kook: rice cake soup)

so you're supposed to eat 떡국 on new year's day in corea, as japanese people ear お雑煮(ozoni). a friend of mine, who's south korean and has lived in japan for 2 years, invited me over to her place and cooked 떡국 for me cause she knows what it's like to not be able to spend holidays with family members. her 떡국 was so yummy. i remember the 떡국 my grandma used to make was a lot simpler.

보배's special 떡국:


lunar new year

this year, februrary 7th was the lunar new year's day (설날 sul ral). since most people go back to their hometown to spend new years with family & relatives, seoul seemed so empty. after having 삼계탕 (samgetang: chicken stuffed with glutinous rice, garlic, ginseng, and other herbs. http://www.skrg.net/samgetang1.jpg), went to 은희씨's friend's place near hongdae.

vegetarian chili made by 은희 씨:














robert mixing 소주 soju & 백새주:




















janice:




















playing wii:














은희 씨:















은희 씨 & 슬기 씨:

one day in 인사동 (insa-dong)

went to 인사동 (insa-dong) with 성준씨.





cooking activity: 찹재 chapchae

yonsei kli level 2 has some activities such as cooking and singing contest. today we made 찹재 chapchae.

new buddy!

found a really cute wallet @ 씽 (ssing). they have bags, wallets, business card cases...etc all hand-made.
i have been using the $7 wallet that i picked up at some gas station in san francisco, but i was looking for a decent one for a long time. i finally found this unique green hand-made leather wallet at a small store in my neighborhood :)



going out with classmates

after the placement test, i was placed in the level 2 @ yonsei korean language institute (kli).
since most students from japan start kli program in april (japanese school year ends in march), there are not too many students from japan yet. instead, many chinese students, especially in lower level classes (level 1 & level 2). my class is no exception. more than half the students are from china, including one ethnic korean born and raised in beijing.
at our level, it's difficult to communicate in korean only, however, some of my chinese classmates speak english, so unlike other classes, we got to know each other very quickly.
this is the first night we went out together. 5900won (about $6) all-you-can-eat korean bbq --> bar --> karaoke. coming to seoul, i appreciate my ability to drink alcohol all the more. this korean drinking culture is .... fun!

2008年2月16日土曜日

new keyboard?

got stickers for hangul (한굴) fonts. now i can type hangul much faster!!!

farewell

i arrived in seoul too late. sajin ssi (on my right), whom i know through a friend/onni/comradefrom the bay area, was about to go back to the states.

he spared me his precious last days to show me around the city & connect me to some people, including sung joon ssi on my left.

oh, he gave me this coolest t-shirts. yes, not korea, it's corea.




hello from seoul

okay, it's time to start reporting what i have been doing in seoul. it's been exactly 6 weeks since i arrived in seoul. living in the shitty "hasuk" (dorm-type of housing: there's usually an ajumma who cooks meals & cleans bathrooms and other shared area) that i found online while i was in japan. so happy i am moving to a new place next weekend! can't wait.

anyways here's my ty
pical daily schedule:

7:00 getting up
7:45 breakfast
8:25 walking to school
9:00 attending classes
13:00 classes end
13:30 lunch
15:00 homework
19:00 dinner
20:00 homework/meeting friends
24:00 going to bed

i had my first mid-term this week, so my schedule was crazy.
when i was not eating, i was studying... there are just so many things that you have to memorize. learning languages is totally different from learning other subjects. it does not require intelligence or any complicated way of thinking, but EFFORTS and COMMITTMENT. so, i had to do good on tests. otherwise, i would be so disappointed at myself. so glad it's all done and was much much easier than i had expected.

by the way, leaning the language is not th
e only purpose why i decided to live in seoul. during my spare time, i try going out and meeting new people. fortunately, i knew some folks, who know my conflicts of being in south corea as "zainichi corean" and interests on other diasporic coreans as well as issues pertaining to social justice works, have been introducing me to other folks. so i do not need to waste my limited time here meeting people that i don't really want to and have little meanings to my life.

however, since i am not going to geneva any more and will be in seoul until at least at the end of june, i will have time to meet people who i think i don't need to, but maybe interesting and help me grow as a person in different ways. who knows.

so, i'll be introduing people, stuff and my random throughts that i want to share with other people on this blog. i don't know how often i am able to write, but when i do hope you all enjoy.