buzzfeed:

Meet Park Geun-Hye, the first female president of South Korea.

I was just having a conversation about the South Korean election with my Uncle when I was in Toronto, and my mom recently. There is a pretty good article in the NY Times that gives a little more history of Park Geun-Hye, which you can read here.

buzzfeed:

Meet Park Geun-Hye, the first female president of South Korea.

I was just having a conversation about the South Korean election with my Uncle when I was in Toronto, and my mom recently. There is a pretty good article in the NY Times that gives a little more history of Park Geun-Hye, which you can read here.

Reblogged from femme{in}nest
lifeofbk:

jimisland:


Olympic fencer Shin A Lam refuses to leave the floor after unfair ruling.

Heart breaking, absolutely heart breaking!

The photo was striking, the video was sad, but the gif illustrates it perfectly.


Read more here.

lifeofbk:

jimisland:

Olympic fencer Shin A Lam refuses to leave the floor after unfair ruling.

Heart breaking, absolutely heart breaking!

The photo was striking, the video was sad, but the gif illustrates it perfectly.

Read more here.

reuters:

North Korea on Friday launched its controversial rocket carrying a weather satellite, South Korea’s Defense Ministry and U.S. officials said.

A spokesman for the Defense Ministry in Seoul told reporters at a briefing that the launch at taken place at 0739 local time (2239 GMT) and that South Korea and the United States were checking whether it had been a success.
North Korea launches rocket amid international condemnation



This is important.

reuters:

North Korea on Friday launched its controversial rocket carrying a weather satellite, South Korea’s Defense Ministry and U.S. officials said.

A spokesman for the Defense Ministry in Seoul told reporters at a briefing that the launch at taken place at 0739 local time (2239 GMT) and that South Korea and the United States were checking whether it had been a success.

North Korea launches rocket amid international condemnation

This is important.

Reblogged from Soup
A South Korean’s unwanted war legacy from Japan
In 1944, he was abducted from his village by Japanese soldiers and forced to dig tunnels at a World War II camp. In 2005, he learned he was mistakenly listed among Japan’s war dead at a Tokyo shrine.
For most of his life, Kim Hui-jong has kept what he considers a shameful secret. In 1944, as a teenager, he was abducted from his village in northern Korea by Japanese soldiers and forced to dig tunnels at a World War II military camp on the island of Saipan.
It would take him a decade of marriage to tell his wife about his past. Kim, 86, still often dreams of the battlefield shelling that severely damaged his hearing and the taunts of his captors: “You Koreans are like canned meat; we can take you anywhere and use you as we see fit.”
He always considered his Japanese enslavement, and the two years he later spent as a U.S. prisoner of war, as a lifelong humiliation. Then, in 2005, Kim received a new insult he insists he still cannot bear: For decades, the former conscript learned, he has been counted among Japan’s war dead and, because of an administrative error, his name is listed at Tokyo’s controversial Yasukuni shrine. He could no longer remain silent.
 Above: Kim Hui-jong, 86, of South Korea, has been trying to get Japan to remove his name from a list of that country’s World War II dead: “I never fought for the Japanese; I was a forced laborer.” (Matt Douma, For The Times / August 15, 2011)
——-
This is awful. Yes, the relationship between South Korea and Japan has always been an extremely complicated one. As the American-born daughter of two South Korean immigrants, I’ve always known that. (If you don’t believe me, ask any Korean person what they think of the Dokdo Islands.) Kim Hui-Jong’s story breaks my heart.

A South Korean’s unwanted war legacy from Japan

In 1944, he was abducted from his village by Japanese soldiers and forced to dig tunnels at a World War II camp. In 2005, he learned he was mistakenly listed among Japan’s war dead at a Tokyo shrine.

For most of his life, Kim Hui-jong has kept what he considers a shameful secret. In 1944, as a teenager, he was abducted from his village in northern Korea by Japanese soldiers and forced to dig tunnels at a World War II military camp on the island of Saipan.

It would take him a decade of marriage to tell his wife about his past. Kim, 86, still often dreams of the battlefield shelling that severely damaged his hearing and the taunts of his captors: “You Koreans are like canned meat; we can take you anywhere and use you as we see fit.”

He always considered his Japanese enslavement, and the two years he later spent as a U.S. prisoner of war, as a lifelong humiliation. Then, in 2005, Kim received a new insult he insists he still cannot bear: For decades, the former conscript learned, he has been counted among Japan’s war dead and, because of an administrative error, his name is listed at Tokyo’s controversial Yasukuni shrine. He could no longer remain silent.

Above: Kim Hui-jong, 86, of South Korea, has been trying to get Japan to remove his name from a list of that country’s World War II dead: “I never fought for the Japanese; I was a forced laborer.” (Matt Douma, For The Times / August 15, 2011)

——-
This is awful. Yes, the relationship between South Korea and Japan has always been an extremely complicated one. As the American-born daughter of two South Korean immigrants, I’ve always known that. (If you don’t believe me, ask any Korean person what they think of the Dokdo Islands.) Kim Hui-Jong’s story breaks my heart.

thedailywhat:

Behind The Curtains of the Day: Filmmakers Lynn Lee and James Leong document the inner workings of North Korea’s powerful propaganda machine as the first foreign film crew allowed inside Pyongyang’s secretive University of Cinematic and Dramatic Arts.

[geekosystem.]

Watch this. Yes, I know it’s 25 minutes long, but it’s worth watching.

It’s exceptionally strange for me to watch this because the entire time all I can think about is how similar we are — we’re all Koreans. They’re speaking the same language, eating the same foods. But then they start talking about Kim Jong-Il, referring to him as “Dear Leader” or talk about Juche, and I am again struck by the incredibly wide chasm between us. It’s shocking how much a country can divide in only 60 years.

Also I really recommend you guys read the memoir, The Aquariums of Pyong-Yang, which tells the story of a Kang Chol-Hwan and his imprisonment in the Yodok concentration camp in North Korea. And if you want to learn more about the human rights crisis in North Korea, I recommend you check out: Human Rights Watch, The Committee for Human Rights in North Korea, and LiNK, an organization dedicated to bringing awareness to the North Korean crisis, and aids & protects North Korean refugees in the underground.

Reblogged from The Daily What
Obama and Lee pass by the South Korean Honor Guard on their way to the presidential office in Seoul. Obama later calls the ceremony “the most spectacular ceremony for a state visit that we’ve been involved with as we’ve traveled.”

Hell yeah.

Obama and Lee pass by the South Korean Honor Guard on their way to the presidential office in Seoul. Obama later calls the ceremony “the most spectacular ceremony for a state visit that we’ve been involved with as we’ve traveled.”

Hell yeah.

soupsoup:

AP

Hundreds of competing lawmakers screamed and wrestled in South Korea’s parliament Wednesday as a rivalry over contentious media reform bills descended into a brawl that sent at least one to a hospital.



When I ask my mom if she would ever move back to Korea, she looks me dead in the eye and says, “Hell no. The government is dumb”
I used to have the argument that Bush was the King of all Dumbasses, but since this isn’t the first time I’ve seen Korean politicians physically fighting over bills, I can’t really argue with her any more.

soupsoup:

AP

Hundreds of competing lawmakers screamed and wrestled in South Korea’s parliament Wednesday as a rivalry over contentious media reform bills descended into a brawl that sent at least one to a hospital.

When I ask my mom if she would ever move back to Korea, she looks me dead in the eye and says, “Hell no. The government is dumb”

I used to have the argument that Bush was the King of all Dumbasses, but since this isn’t the first time I’ve seen Korean politicians physically fighting over bills, I can’t really argue with her any more.
Reblogged from Soup