Many of the victims from this weekend’s tragedy in #Itaewon/#이태원 were in their 20s, which means they would have been in their tween/teenage years when the MV #Sewol disaster (#세월호 침몰 사고) happened on April 16, 2014.
I’ve been thinking about Sewol a lot over these days. I have memories of seeing it on the news and discussing it in my high school law class, but it was only after coming to Korea that I really understood the scope of what happened, the gov't's complicity, & social impact it had.
On August 17th, I travelled down to Ansan in Gyeonggi-do for a visit to Danwon High School and the Danwon High School 4.16 Memory Classroom. The memory classroom was designated on December 27, 2021 as National Archives of Korea No. 14 by the Ministry of the Interior and Safety.
The memory classroom is where classrooms from the 2nd & 3rd floor of the school were relocated after the school's reopening for educational use. It is here that the 250 students and 11 teachers who passed away during the sinking of Sewol took their last class.
When I say that the classrooms were moved in their entirety, I don’t just mean the desks, chairs, and blackboards, but even the ceiling tiles, door frames, and baseboard trim were moved and reassembled like a puzzle.
Visiting was indeed an emotional experience for I was guided by the mother of one of the deceased students, Han Goeun. I believe I was the only visitor at the time. We walked through the different classrooms together and I listened as she told me about her daughter.
Han Goeun was only two years my senior. Like me, she loved taking pictures as well as videos. She had founded a video club at the school with her friends and dreamed of one day becoming a camera director for Seoul Broadcasting or KBS.
She was tall and strong and could easily carry around all the heavy camera equipment that she would need for her future job. Her body wasn’t recovered until 22 days after the ferry sunk.
She was so strong in telling me her story, and I had really had no words to express how sorry I was for her loss in Korean, let alone English.
We spoke a bit a longer about other things, and she asked me if I could show her how to use an app on her phone; something her daughter would likely have been able to help her with if she were still alive.
For the rest of my visit, I walked slowly between the desks looking at the portraits of other students and reading about the dreams they never had the chance to fulfill.
Lee Janghwa was a gentle boy who enjoyed sketching and wanted to become a fashion designer. Kang Sunjeong liked to draw too and wished to become a wedding dress designer. Her boyfriend Yang Cheolmin and his friend Song Kanghyun were avid soccer players.
Heo Dayoon volunteered her church’s daycare centre for multicultural families and wanted to become a kindergarten teacher. Yun Sol dreamed of becoming a police officer.
All of these students had dreams for future, which they never got to pursue because they were failed by their country’s government. Those who died in Itaewon were unfinished stories too. They were in the primes of their lives, and we will more about who they were as individuals.
Life can be short, brutal, and painful. It can take your loved ones away without notice. Be kind, compassionate, and forgiving. Never stop telling them how much you love them.
*we will eventually learn more about who they were as individuals.
*Excuse the few typos in this thread... the unfortunate result of trying to cut paragraphs down to fit within 180 characters.

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More from @jackwgreenberg

Oct 30
I just passed the scene of the tragedy that occurred last night in #Itaewon/#이태원 and I really have no words to express the sadness I feel. As of now, 151 people have lost their lives - many of them in their 20s just like me. #이태원사고 Image
Floral tributes for the victims have started to be left at the top of #Itaewon/#이태원 Station Exit 1 and posted on storefronts, such as Foot Locker’s, beside the alleyway where the stampede occurred. ImageImageImageImage
The authorities don’t know the cause of the stampede yet, and I won’t make assumptions. All I will say is that one of the alleyways in question appears to be no more than 5 meters in width, and that reports suggest the police presence was insufficient for the crowds present ImageImageImageImage
Read 7 tweets
Jul 6
Back in May, I joined the Architecture Archive Project for a short discussion and walk around the former HQ of the Chosŏn Land Trust Company (aka Hanil Building), a 3-story brick structure that was designed and built in 1929 by Japanese companies & boasted a lot of local history
The land on which the building sat until recently is now being redeveloped by Buyoung Housing with a 27-story hotel, which when complete will have 850 rooms. Initially the company was given a construction permit on the condition that the façade of the Hanil Building be preserved
However, when construction took off, a vehicle was damaged after building materials fell from an exterior wall that was being worked on. An assessment of the building's structural integrity was then conducted; this resulted in an "E" grade being given.
Read 8 tweets
Jul 6
As noted in a previous thread, I made a presentation for my Korean class last week about a few lesser known sites in Korea. One of them was the now abandoned prison in Munheung-dong, Buk-gu, Gwangju.
This prison was the third to have been established in the city’s modern history.  The first opened in 1908 during the last years of the Korean empire at what is now 충장로. It measured just 95 square meters and could hold 130 prisoners in 11 cells.
The Japanese-led Government General of Chosun would eventually take it over its operations until constructing a new prison in today’s Dongmyeong-dong, Dong-gu in 1912.
Read 31 tweets
Jul 5
Two of my latest reads… 1) Cohen’s #TheNetanyahus; a satirical account of the late Harold Bloom’s encounter with @netanyahu’s father while the latter was applying for his job at @Cornell. 2) @JihyunPark7’s memoir focuses on her yrs growing up in the DPRK, & not 1 but 2 escapes Image
I found @JihyunPark7’s memoir helpful in understanding just how powerful 성분 is in reality, especially when one is a descendant of somebody who fled South during the war. Also appreciated the co-author’s reflections as a South Korean, which were interspersed between chapters
A detail that piqued my interest were references to the father one of @JihyunPark7’s students who was said to have been fighting in Libya. @sukisworld “Without You, There Is No Us,” which I’m reading now, also makes note of some PUST student’s fathers being sent there for work.
Read 5 tweets
Jul 4
On this day in 1987, 21 year-old Lee Han Yeol died at Yonsei Severance Hospital in Seoul. Lee was hit in the head by a police tear-gas canister 27 days earlier, but never regained consciousness and remained on life-support until succumbing to his injuries. ImageImageImageImage
These injuries were sustained during mass street demonstrations against the death by torture of SNU student Park Jeong Cheol and the Chun Doo Hwan dictatorship on his university’s campus.
The June Struggle, which the June 9 demonstrations at Yonsei were a part of, gained support from the middle class and forced Roh Tae Woo, later Pres. & then Chair of the Democratic Justice Party to accept all opposition demands for demo. reforms & the release of poli. prisoners
Read 5 tweets

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