Friday, 6 August 2010

Korean Folklore Essay


Since its creation, the nation of Korea has used folklore to illuminate the history of Korea. It blends the complex history of the nation, its strong connection with nature and high value of spirituality to form models of morality for its citizens to base their actions on. In fact, the very history of Korea is based on the myth that celestial beings and inhabitants of Earth were brought together to form an ideal kingdom that became Korea. Unfortunately the true history of this nation is not nearly that ideal.

Korea was first inhabited when tribes form Central and Northern Asia stumbled onto the peninsula around 2333 B.C. From this time on the inhabitants of this land have been under constant pressure of war from other lands. After years of constant invasion the tribes living on the peninsula finally banded together to found the kingdom of Korea in the first century of A.D.

During the reign of the Silla Kingdom, around 700 A.D., cultural strides were made by building great palaces, pagoda and pleasure gardens all over the countryside. These beautiful displays of culture were so admired by surrounding nations, such as Japan, that they greatly influenced the culture of other nations as well. Korea remained quite prosperous until the 13th century when the Mongols invaded Korea and reduced all they had built to ashes. After years of occupation, the Mongol Empire eventually collapsed and the Choson dynasty began.

This peace was short lived though, and at the turn of the 16th century Japan and China had both invaded Korea. By the 17th century, the Chinese Mancho dynasty had completely taken over. After some time, Korea slowly began regaining its land and closed its self off completely to any outside influences until the early 20th century. Despite the best efforts of the Koreans, the Japanese managed to invade one more time, and continued causing trouble for Korea until the end of World War II. After the war the United States occupied the South of Korea while the USSR took over the North. Elections were held in the South of Korea to determine the fate of the country. The decision was that the South declared independence from the North, but this only lead to invasions from the North and constant battles between the two until 1953. By the end of these wars two million people were dead and the country was completely divided between the North and the South. The South bounced back and forth between a semi-democracy and a martial law until the 1980’s. The citizens disliked this constant upheaval, and began banning together in protest, causing the government to fear that a Civil War may begin. The people of South Korea demanded democratic elections, freedom of the press and the release of political prisoners. By there surprise, President Chun decided to give everything the people were asking for.

In 1998, Kim Dae-jung became the first non-conservative president in the 50-year history of South Korea’s independence. Dae-jung introduced economic and democratic reforms and also wanted to better South Koreans relations with the north. By keeping his promise in 2000, President Kim Dae-jung visited North Korea and shook the hand of the leader of the North, Kim Jong II. In October of the same year, Dae-jung was awarded the Nobel-Peace Prize.

After years of war and turmoil, Korea is finally able to focus on its rich culture and rebuild its strong agricultural lands that most Koreans depend on as a way of life. Korea’s mild climate and fertile soil makes their agriculture plentiful and has made rice their number one grain since the earliest history of the nation. Rice plays such an important role in Korean culture that it is often referenced in much for Korea’s folklore. For example, the classic tale of Two Brothers describes how two brothers attempt to better the other life by providing him with an extra bag of rice. Based on this tale, it is considered bad luck in Korea to throw out rice.

Farming is also a large part of Korean culture and has influenced many of its customs. The Koreans have kept their ritual of farming since the beginning of the empire by sowing the seeds in the Spring, taking care of the rice plants in the Summer, harvesting crops in the fall, and preserving cereals in the winter months. In most other cultures, farmers would plan their important agriculture dates around the sun’s orbit. In Korea, the position of the moon is much more important, for it marks the change of seasons and all important agriculture dates. The moon is not only used as a calendar for farming, but it is also used to illuminate the night skies.

The most festive day of the year in Korean culture is “Sol”, which is the Koreans New Years Day. What is different about this New Years celebration when compared to other cultures is that everyone becomes a year older on this day instead of one ones birthday. Korean’s would be so excited and full of anticipation the few day’s before sol that would stay awake all night to receive the New Year. This custom turned into a playful joke saying, “If you fall asleep, you will get your eyebrows turned white.”

On the morning of sol, all family members dress in their best clothes, which are called, “solbim (new clothes of sol)”, and gather at the eldest-son’s house for the ancestral ceremonies. This custom is so strong that if the eldest son lives in a far off rural area that a three day holiday if granted to allow Korean’s to reunite with there family and be able to spend time with them.

Rice cake soup called “Ttokkuk” is used for the ancestor worship ritual on New Years day. Before an altar, family members and all relatives pay homage to the deceased ancestors. After this ritual is over, they sit down and feast on the foods that were displayed during the ceremony.

Even though Sol only lasts for three days, festivals for the holiday last until “Taeborum”, which represents the first full moon of the New Year, since the moon plays such a large role in Korean belief system. Korean culture also uses the first full moon to foretell the years harvest outcome. During this period of festivities oral traditions have come about since folklore is often told during this time to depict the cultures love of nature and man and to teach important life lessons. This is also a time when custom plays a large role in the daily activities of Koreans. One of these customs is to crack nuts with your teeth, which is believed to make your teeth strong and healthy throughout the New Year. Folk games begin in the afternoon of the New Year, and go until Teaborum. Children fly kites, which is one of the most popular activities. In the last day of the celebrations, the string of the kite is cut and it disappears into the sky. The most thrilling game though is a tough-of-rope competition between all of the townspeople. This time of festivities is truly cherished by all Koreans and in 1985 Sol was considered a national legal holiday for all to celebrate their culture. Today in Korea, Sol is officially known as “Folklore Day”.

Another day that the Korean’s cherish culturally is Hansik. The word Hansik means “cold food” in Korean. This day falls on the 105th day after the solstice, which is the 5th of April. This time of the year is the beginning of spring, and the time when farmers start sowing their seeds and watering their rice patties. The custom of eating cold food on this day originated in China, but has long since become Korean culture. Today, Hansik is used to welcome the warm weather and prepare for the farming season. Like New Years, this day is also for worshiping the deceased ancestors of ones family. This happens in the morning of Hansik, and the family gathers together to visit and clean the tomb of there ancestors. This day is shared with Arbor Day, so public cemeteries are usually full and crowded with the family members planting trees and flowers around the tombs.

Another holiday that is almost as popular and perhaps more special than Sol is Ch’usok. Ch’usok means the harvest moon and it lands on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month. This day can be considered equivalent of America’s Thanksgiving. On this day, Koreans wake up early to perform their ancestral worship. The ritual starts with the family preparing food from the new crops, followed by visits to the tombs of their ancestors to again clean the tombs. The Koreans believe that the harvested crops are gifts and blessing from their ancestors, Ch’usok is the day they show their gratitude for these gifts. Many foods are prepared especially for Ch’usok. One custom that many Koreans have cherished since childhood is the making of Songp’yon with family members. Songp’yon is a crescent shaped rice cake made with many different spices for unique flavor. This holiday is usually blessed with mild weather, a bright full moon and lots of wonderful food made with the freshly harvested food with the new crops. As with cultural holidays, traditional games, music, and storytelling are combined to create a festive mood.

As you can see, while Korea has dealt with a long history of war an almost constant upheaval, it has also celebrated a rich history of enjoying life and celebrating ancestry and culture. Koreans, to this day, feel that it is necessary to relax and reflect on life and its many gifts in order to maintain sanity. Through folklore the people of Korea can be reminded of these values of reflection can apply them to life situations. All works of Korean folklore prove that there are no “accidents” in life, such as bad harvest, death of a loved one or even war. In the myths and tales weather characters survive the hardships they must endure or not is used to reflect how life is not merely accidental, but a series of lessons that can either be learned from, or that will lead to eventual lead to demise. Characters who do not remember to be appreciative of what their land and their ancestors have provided for them always find that their story ends with the ladder. By looking into the history and culture of Korea, with sad stories of war being overshadowed by widespread celebration of culture and history, it is plain to see that Koreans today still remember the lessons learned through folklore and have used them to from the rich culture they experience today.

The Great Battle of Hansan Festival Opens August 11th at Tongyeong

This historic festival commemorates Hansando Daecheop (the Great Battle of Hansan, 1592), one of the major battles won by Admiral Yi Sun-shin (1545-1598) during the Joseon Dynasty (1392-1910). Now in its 49th year, this year the Great Battle of Hansan Festival is scheduled to be held for five days from August 11th-15th at Munhwa Madang and Yi Sun-shin Park in Tongyeong-si, Gyeongsangnam-do.



On the first day of the festival, as a naval vessel docks at Tongyeong Port, a memorial ceremony will take place at Chungnyeolsa Temple (충렬사) to honor Admiral Lee Sun-shin, where the great leader’s ancestral tablet is enshrined. On the 12th, Gunjeom Ceremony, a naval parade, will be performed at Sebyeonggwan (세병관, one of the main offices of the three naval bases of the Joseon Dynasty) after which the Samdosuguntongjesa (삼도수군통제사, Three Major Naval Bases) Parade will wind along the downtown streets. On the 14th, a reenactment of the Great Battle of Hansan will take place at 18:00 off the shores of Hansando Island featuring ships shooting fire and lasers into the night sky.

A wide range of traditional performances such as Namhaean Byeolsingut, Tongyeong Tallori and Taekkyeon will be held along with other side events including ‘Making Geobukseon (Turtle Ship)’, and ‘Creating Your Own Najeonchilgi’ (mother-of-pearl craft).

*More Info

☞ Go to The Great Battle of Hansan Festival 2010
☞ Korea Travel Phone: +82-55-1330 (Korean, English, Japanese, Chines

2010 Chuncheon Puppet Festival to present 180 performances by 80 teams from home and abroad


The 2010 Chuncheon Puppet Festival is held at major theaters in Chuncheon City from August 9th to 15th. During the festival period, a wide range of puppet shows will be presented by performers from home and abroad.

Marking its 22nd anniversary this year, the festival will feature 180 puppet plays and a wide range of side events by 50 performance teams, including professional puppeteers from Germany, France, Belgium, Japan and Russia. This year, a number of special guests will be taking the stage: The Fifth Wheel from Germany performing “Cabaret On Strings” (a traditional European musical marionette comedy); Kotofei from Russia performing “Nonsense” (an animal puppet show based on a children’s poem); and Butterflies & Company from Belgium performing “Oetsie Poetsie” (a show where two performers create a variety of sounds and rhythms using everyday items such as brooms, mops and vacuum cleaners).

A range of experience events will be held during the festival period as well. Barbara Scheel, a German psychiatrist, will present a therapy session using puppets titled ‘Puppet Therapy: Communicate to Open Your Mind.’ Yu Seong-Gyun from ‘Inhyeongin’, a puppet performers association in Korea, will be giving a lecture on puppet performance titled ‘Puppet Performance, the Key to communication and understanding’. A ticket for special performances and shows by overseas teams costs 10,000won; general tickets cost 7,000won. Those booking in advance may be rendered eligible to receive a 20% discount.

<>
☞ Period: August 9th (Mon) - 15th(Sun), 2010
☞ Venue: Chuncheon Puppet Theater in Chuncheon, Chuncheon Theatre Momjit, Chuncheon Youth Center
☞ For more information: +82-33-242-8450
☞ Korea Travel Phone: +82-33-1330 (Korean, English, Japanese, Chinese)
☞ Ticket Reservation: 1544-1555 (Interpark Ticket Call Center)
☞ Performance schedule (Korean)
☞ Official website http://cocobau.cafe24.com/ (Korean)

Thursday, 5 August 2010

Camp in the Korean mountains this summer


Hwayang Valley, Songnisan Mountain (Image: Korea Tourism Organization)

Hwayang Valley, Songnisan Mountain (Image: Korea Tourism Organization)


If you’re tired of the same old beaches and sand this summer, how about a camping up a mountain? Korea, 70 percent of whose land is covered with mountains, is certainly an ideal place to camp and hike. With clean air, fresh water and camping facilities conveniently maintained by the Korea National Park Service (KNPS) that is eager to bring in more visitors, what more can you ask for, for you and your family? Here are a few scenic places recommended by the national park service this summer.


Sogeumgang Valley in Odaesan Mountain, Gangwon-do (Gangwon Province), is often referred to as a miniature Geumgangsan Mountain (its name actually means that), one of the most scenic mountains in the country. Boasting its own grace, it was designated as scenic spot no. 1 in Korea in 1970.

Sogeumgang, Odaesan Mountain (Photo: Yonhap News)

Sogeumgang, Odaesan Mountain (Photo: Yonhap News)


The Gucheondong Valley (30 kilometers long) in Deogyusan Mountain is famous for its clear, fresh water surrounded by numerous rocky cliffs. Once there were 14 Buddhist temples gathered there, lived in by nearly 9,000 monks in total. Whenever it was meal time, the stream in the area turned white from all the rice rinsed in the water. That was how the border for Gucheondong Valley was set – according to the flow of the rice-rinsed water. Recently the national park set up an exploration route “the Old Road of Gucheondong” (5.9 kilometers) which is excellent for eco-tourism.


The entire length of Baemsagol Valley (9 kilometers) of Jirisan Mountain is formed of fantastically shaped cliffs. At the center sit many large flat rocks known as Neoreok-bawi that can hold over 100 people and 100 or more big and small waterfalls. Thanks to the gentle slopes that make it easy to hike around, the valley has long been one of the most popular mountaineering spots in Korea.


Of the many valleys in Chiaksan Mountain, Guryeong Valley (7 kilometers) is considered the people’s favorite, due to its long, smooth path lined with lush woods that give cool shade during summer. The clean water that flows from the mountainside (1,200 meters above sea-level) forms big and small waterfalls.

Gucheondong Valley, Deogyusan Mountain (Photo: Yonhap News)

Gucheondong Valley, Deogyusan Mountain (Photo: Yonhap News)


The Hwayang Valley at Songnisan Mountain is especially rich in cool clean, water and is a perfect place to splash around for fun. Surrounded by rich forests filled with interesting bugs to watch and large, flat rocks to sit on, this is the place to go with kids.


For those living in Korea, try out the official website of the Korea National Park Service (http://english.knps.or.kr/), where you can make online reservations. To make a reservation, first click on the white ECO TOUR button on the top of the page. Then click on “National Park Reservation” where you’ll see icons linked to the available mountains in the area. Click on the “Facility Reservation” button at the top right of the icons page, and then “Shelter.” Shelter will present you with camp sites for the three mountains Seoraksan, Deogyusan and Jirisan.

Baemsagol Valley, Jirisan Mountain

Baemsagol Valley, Jirisan Mountain


If you’ve made up your mind about the mountains click “Reservation” and a window will pop up asking you to fill in your name and e-mail address. When that is completed, another page will come up with four menus – Notice, Reserving, My Reservations & Reserve Others. The Notice will provide a basic guide to reservations, Reserving will show you the vacancy status of camp sites. Since it is already the middle of the summer vacation, many of the rooms are likely to be filled up. Reserving Others is the menu that shows available spots in other mountains.

The final part of the reservation process will require you to write down your name, phone, cell phone, e-mail and the number of people, plus their ages and genders. You’re done after you complete the form and click on the “apply” button. Then confirm your status through the My Reservations Page.

Auto Camping Site

Auto Camping Site


On the day, just show up with your ID card on the spot and you and your group will be admitted to the reserved camp site. To cancel your choice, return to My Reservation and simply click the cancel button. There may be few glitches to online reservations, so for further inquiries, refer to the e-mail address and phone number shown on the website. This online reservation service is currently provided only in Korean and English.


Meanwhile, the KNPS also rents tents. The price is 5,000–8,000 won per night, depending on the size of the tent. Auto-camping (car camping) is also available in 15 places, including Naewonsa Buddhist Temple on Jirisan Mountain.

Korean restaurants around the globe


Hansik, the Korean word for Korean cuisine, is tantalizing global taste buds. Here we'd like to introduce some famous Korean restaurants around the world.

-Hong Kong


Hanareum located in Causeway Bay, Hong Kong, prepares traditional and yet modern Korean dishes. As most restaurants in Hong Kong have menus with hundreds of choices, Hanareum offers about one hundred Korean dishes including Korean hot pot (jeongol), other kinds of soups and traditional tea. Haemul topokki, stir-fried rice cakes with seafood and haemul jeongol, seafood hot pot, are the top sellers.
Hanareum 852-2877-7797

-Japan


Soseonjae in Tokyo, Japan. This is a franchise outlet of the original Soseonjae in Samcheong-dong in Seoul. They use ten-year-old fermented soy bean paste and other home-made soy sauce. In 2008, it was nominated as one of the hottest restaurants in Tokyo by a famous Japanese restaurant guide book.
Soseonjae 03-5545-6691 sosonjae.jp


-France



Woojeong in Paris. Here you can try Korean cuisine with a French touch. Customized for French people, Woojeong offers dishes that don’t necessarily require chopsticks - for example gujeolpan, a platter of nine delicacies that don’t need to be wrapped. Once every two months, it holds a class on matching wine with Korean food.
Woojeong 01-45-20-72-82


-England


Myungga in London. To satisfy Londoners’ picky taste buds, Myungga offers a very detailed menu with many different kinds of kimchi and vegetable side dishes. The restaurant makes its own red hot pepper powder and uses fresh organic vegetables brought from Germany. Pork bulgogi, napa wraps with pork (bossam) are its bestsellers.
Myungga 44-020-7734-8220 myungga.co.uk


-U.S.


Located in Midtown, New York, Bann provides traditional Korean food prepared by an American chef. Compared to the restaurants in Korea, Bann uses different amounts of soy sauce, salt and other seasonings, but sundubu-jjigae, spicy soft tofu stew, and yukgaejang, spicy beef soup, are popular like in Korea. On the wall, it displays chopsticks used by famous customers who have visited the restaurant.
Baan 212-582-4446 bannrestaurant.com
source: Korea.net

First English Baekdu Daegan guidebook published


Seoul Selection, a publisher specializing in English-language books about Korea, has this month released a comprehensive guidebook to hiking along the Baekdu Daegan ridge that stretches roughly north-south along the Korean peninsula.


New Zealanders Roger Shepherd and Andrew Douch, fully in the thrall of the Baekdu Daegan range, completed a 70-day hike along this mountainous backbone of Korea and spent the next two years writing the manuscript. A further year of editing resulted in this guidebook, which includes not only the information necessary for the journey itself, but also explains the importance and the unparalleled characteristics of this mountain chain as a hiking course.


The authors believe that the Baekdu Daegan has the same potential to develop into a popular mountain-climbing destination for international tourists like the American Appalachian mountain range.


As well as explaining its historical, cultural and ecological importance, the 452-page “Baekdu Daegan Trail: Hiking Korea’s Mountain Spine” will arouse the interest of non-Korean readers with its more than 200 photos of fascinating religious site scattered here and there along the trail and lookouts boasting stunning views.


Meticulous research for a trouble-free hike

This book divides the 735km-long stretch of mountain range from Mount Jirisan’s Cheonwangbong Peak to Hyangnobong Peak in Gangwon-do (Gangwon Province) into 17 sections, and then subdivides these up into one-day treks, making it possible for hikers to approach the enormous undertaking little by little.


Furthermore, the specific routes of each course and their main points along the way are clearly illustrated using diagrams and maps throughout the book, so that even non-mountaineers can hike the distances without trouble.


What’s more, there are GPS co-ordinates for sources of drinking water – one of the most important things when hiking a mountain – and details of camping sites or overnight accommodation. For hikers who want to leave the path to visit a nearby village or city before resuming the walk later, the guidebook gives transport information, too.


Kiwi who fell in love with the Baekdu Daegan

“You could go anywhere in the world and you still wouldn’t find a beautiful mountain and awesome cultural space that compares with the Baekdu Daegan. I really hope that people from around the world hear about it and come here to see it.”


These are the words of the book’s co-author Roger Shepherd. Until last year he was in charge of the New Zealand police force’s elite diplomatic escort unit, before resigning early this year and relocating to Korea.


After hiking the entire length of the Baekdu Daegan in 2007, he fell completely in love with it. “The Baekdu Daegan is not only beautiful, but it is also a place rich in cultural and historical significance,” he explained. “I wanted to become the first westerner to make the Baekdu Daegan known to the world, like those who first made the Himalayas globally famous,” he said, showing his high hopes for this book.

source:Korea.net

About the authors:
Roger Shepherd
Born in New Zealand’s Porirua, when Roger was still young he took off on a trip to Africa. For nine years he traveled through South Africa, Mozambique, Zambia and so on, working as a national park ranger and safari guide. In 1998 he left Africa and in 2000 he visited Korea for the first time.


Returning to New Zealand in 2001, Roger began a career in service for his country as a policeman. In 2006 he took six months leave and visited Korea, where he heard about the Baekdu Daegan from his friend Andrew Douch and first attempted to hike its length. It was then that he realized the need for an English language guidebook.


After resolving to put together such a guide, he asked Andrew Douch for his help, and while they were researching the book they met an expert on Korean mountain spirit culture -- David Mason, a professor at Kyung Hee University. Prof. Mason supported them in their expedition to the Baekdu Daegan, and made his own research materials available to them. In September 2007 Roger and Andrew completed the 735km trek after 70 days. Roger delivered a presentation to the Royal Asiatic Society in Seoul at the end of that month to tell the story of the hike and show some of the many photos taken along the way.


For the next two years, the duo threw themselves into the writing, and David Mason went over their manuscript and offered suggestions. At the beginning of this year, Roger resigned from the diplomatic escort unit of the New Zealand police, came to Korea and took up a role as the honorary ambassador for the Korea Tourism Organization. He is now preparing to promote Korean mountain culture and tourism abroad.


Andrew Douch
Andrew grew up in a town near a mountain on the North Island of New Zealand. In 1998 he graduated from the University of Waikato with a degree in social science and came to Korea to teach English, living in various cities of Gyeongsang-do (Gyeongsang Province) including Daegu, Andong, Pohang and Yangsan. During his more than ten years in Korea, Andrew has spent much time trekking the mountains and is quite a recognizable figure to the residents of mountain villages.


Currently he is living in the city of Yangsan near Tongdosa Temple. Each weekend he travels to a different mountain and he is putting together a new guidebook on mountaineering in Korea.


David Mason
David Mason, Professor of Tourism at Kyung Hee University, is widely known as an expert in the culture of Korean mountain spirits. Born in the American state of Michigan, he first came to Korea in the early 1980s and achieved a Master’s Degree at Yonsei University, specializing in Korean religious history. He has since written six books on Korean culture and tourism. He maintains a well-visited website in English on Korean mountains, Buddhism, folk culture and mountain spirits.


There is now an English language website on the Baekdu Daegan itself, with basic information and links to other relevant site, while you can see more information about the book and sample pages here.

Korean alphabet authorized by Indonesian gov't for Cia-Cia tribe

The Indonesian government has recognized the Korean alphabet as the official writing system of an illiterate Indonesian tribe, a Korean language research institute said Monday.

This is the first case of hangeul becoming an officially acknowledged tool for communications outside Korean territory.

The acknowledgement came nearly one year after the Hunminjeongeum Research Institute began promoting the alphabet or hangeul in Korean to the people, called “Cia-Cia” in August last year under the support of the city of Bau-Bau in Sulawesi, a major island of the Asian country.

Back then, the Cia-Cia tribe was at risk of losing its language as there were no tools available to hand it down to its descendants, researchers said.

Amirul Tamim, Bau-Bau mayor, said in a recent interview with Yonhap News that the central government has approved the use of Hangeul as the tribe’s official alphabet. The central government is mapping out plans to support its use, the mayor added.

The Indonesian government has been reluctant to accept it though reasons for the hesitation are unknown.

Many Korean experts say this approval will give an impetus in promoting the Korean alphabet to other small tribes there grappling with a lack of linguistic tools to hand down their legacies to younger generations.

But some critics are negative about the export of the Korean alphabet, arguing the affected people will see itself further isolated in language and culture from the rest of the country.

According to the institute, since July last year, dozens of children in the tribe have learned how to write, read, and pronounce the Korean alphabet based on a textbook provided by the institute.

Last December, some Cia-Cia children and the Bau-Bau mayor visited Seoul at the invitation of the Korean government.

source:Korea times

The Korean Wave in Japan: Lines Blur Between J-Pop, K-Pop


The lines between J-Pop and K-Pop are increasingly being blurred. It’s no coincidence that the Tune in Tokyo sound is an amalgamation of Gobal Pop with an Asian flavor–we love to spin whatever is catchy and progressive, and any of our attendees will know that we love dance music from both Japan and Korea.

Tune in Tokyo was founded as a J-Pop and J-Rock club event, and since our beginnings in earnest, our sound has expanded to reflect the widening and more integrated Asian pop market. A big part of this change has been influenced by what many are calling the “Korean Wave”, or Hallyu, marking the greater export and influence of South Korean dramas and music in the last decade.

We are particulary interested in the synergy between Japan and Korea in modern music culture. K-Pop has certainly exerted an influence in the Japanese market in recent years, with the staggering popularity of Tohoshinki (a.k.a. TVXQ! or Tong Vfang Xien Qi). The Grace (a.k.a. Tenjōchiki or CSJH) was an early entrant as part of the Korean Wave in Japan back in 2006. BoA is, of course, the best known Korean artist in Japan in the last decade, having produced a huge catalogue of Japanese material. In fact, BoA is probably better known internationally for her theme song “Every Heart” for the anime “Inu Yasha”, recorded in Japanese, than her Korean language releases. More major Korean artists have been making their debut in Japan, with Big Bang and Kara being notable examples. Girls Generation will soon make their Japanese debut.

The greater presence of K-Pop not only makes for an interesting injection of a fresh sound into the Japanese market, but it also represents some significant shifts in cultural attitudes, and the direction in which music pop culture moves through Asia and the world at large. At Tune in Tokyo, we’ve always appreciated the way music moves from one culture to another, and is re-interpreted, localized, and then produces all kinds of interesting new sounds. This flow of pop music culture doesn’t move in one direction. You see J-Pop influenced Korean Pop like Orange Caramel (the new sub-unit of After School), J-Pop and K-Pop influenced Thai pop like Seven Day and Neko Jump, collaborations–like Aoyama Thelma and TaeYang’s “Fall in Love”, Green Day inspired Pop-Punk acts in Japan, the Wonder Girls launching an ambitious plan to release new music in Korean, English, and Chinese, plenty of Lady Gaga creeping into South Korea by way of both her music and fashion, and Korean groups like f(x) and Miss A featuring members from China.

We happen to love this synergy, because when different music cultures come together, it also brings together different people. It’s a great way to make friends, exchange ideas, and increase intercultural communication. As DJ Del has often observed, music is a universal language.

Our foray into K-Pop began with Tune in Tokyo’s DJ Tora dropping the Wonder Girls’ “So Hot” and other tracks in Indie Clubs around LA at the International Pop Conspiracy parties in ’97 – ’98. It’s fascinating to see the way the Korean Wave has effected Global Pop, and J-Pop in particular, since then. Were always looking for fresh new sounds from across the world, and will continue to deliver it to you on our dance floor! If you hear of any new and exciting trends in global pop, let us know!

Join us for our first-ever K-Pop Meet-Up at I Love Boba on Friday September 3rd! We’re throwing an unofficial pre-party for the SM Town concert at Staples Center, which will be held on September 4th, featuring SM artists such as BoA, Girls Generation, Super Junior, f(x), SHINee, and more! Come party with us the night before at Koreatown’s best boba cafe, located at 534 S Western Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90020. No cover, and all ages!

source:Greg Hignight
DJ and Founder, Tune in Tokyo

Tuesday, 3 August 2010

S. Korea to train Myanmar engineers in CNG-car installation


YANGON, Aug. 1 (Xinhua) -- South Korea will train Myanmar young engineers in installation of Korea-made CNG (compressed natural gas)-run vehicles with Korean expertise, engineering circle said on Sunday.

It was disclosed following a recent workshop held in Yangon and attended by members of the Myanmar Engineers Association, experts from local companies and South Korean companies such as Hyundai, KANGV (Korea Association For Gas Vehicles) and Kwangshin Machine Industry Co, Ltd.

Most of petrol- or diesel-run vehicles operating in Yangon city have been converted into CNG-run as part of the country's efforts to save fuel and reduce import of crude oil.

To facilitate the conversion, Myanmar allowed over a dozen private industries to carry out the undertakings on buses, trucks, taxis and saloons in addition to the Ministry of Energy.

Meanwhile, Myanmar is encouraging import of CNG-run cars rather than petrol's or diesel's cars.

Source: Xinhua News

Two Korean villages named as UNESCO's World Heritage sites


Andong City's Hahoe Village and Gyeongju City's Yangdong village, which are the two most representative historic clan villages in Korea, were registered on the UNESCO World Cultural Heritage list on Saturday. The listing of Hahoe and Yangdong is the 10th for Korea on the UNESCO list.

The World Heritage Committee (WHC) met in Brasilia, Brazil to review candidates for inclusion on its World Heritage List and announced that those two villages were to be added, praising them as places that provide both physical and spiritual nourishment.

(photo: Yonhap News)

(photo: Yonhap News)

The architecture of Chunghyodang house, Hahoe Village, Andong City.

(photo: Yonhap News)

(photo: Yonhap News)

The WHC visited Yangdong Folk Village in October 2009.

source:Korea.net

Seoul to incubate 1,000 green businesses by 2013


The Korean government will nurture 1,000 enterprises specialized in green industry in the field of the parts and materials sector by 2013.

The Small and Medium Business Administration, Korea’s ministry-level agency supporting small and medium sized businesses, announced its plan to assist green businesses at the 8th Green Growth Committee meeting held on Jul. 13, led by President Lee Myung-bak.

President Lee Myung-bak (center) at the Green Growth Committee meeting held in Seoul on Jul. 13, 2010


The organization also presented its detailed plan to support small and medium firms in green sectors by each of the stages from establishment, finance, human resources, research and development to overseas penetration.

The Korean government will incubate 1,000 such firms specialized in green industry, in order to generate more jobs by 2013.

The key part of the plan is to focus on supporting research and development (R&D) of localizing parts and materials in green industry, for which currently Korea depends mostly on imports. The government will also set up direct assistance measures so that local green firms can move overseas more easily.

The government will support selected universities in the green sector in particular, so that universities and research centers can create more jobs and extend the designation of green technology university and green technology-centered zones to form a so-called "green industry cluster."

The administration will extend the amount of the support fund from 105 billion won in 2009 to 1.1 trillion won by 2013.

Moreover, every three years the agency will select 200 promising green technologies for small and medium firms to establish the direction of green R&D and assist green firms by providing mainly R&D support.

It will also build global green cooperation centers and green export support centers for small and medium businesses to provide information about the international market, help green firms receive overseas orders, and commission and engage in joint ventures with conglomerates.

source:korea.net

Saemangeum Certified as World's Longest Seawall by Guinness

Korea's Saemangeum Seawall has been certified by the Guinness World Records as the longest man-made dike in the world.
Located in North Jeolla Province, the 33.9 kilometer barrier connecting the counties of Gunsan and Buan officially finished construction in April.
With more than 200 people on hand, a ceremony was held on Monday to congratulate the formal recognition.
And now, Korea's construction technology has been recognized internationally for being ahead of its time.


[Interview : ] "Korea's construction technology has wowed the world. This is what the Rural Community Corporation has done. I believe this will act as a stepping stone for us to export our technology to other nations."

Hoping the dike can become an economic highway to reach the world beyond Northeast Asia, the Korean government spent 2.9 trillion won, or some 2.5 billion US dollars, in constructing the record-setting barrier, also known as "the Great Wall on the Sea."
It has now officially replaced the 32.5-kilometers-long Zuiderzee dike in the Netherlands as the longest on Earth.


[Interview : ] "The former longest seawall was actually achieved by the Netherlands. And previously, it was the longest dike. But, Saemangeum has actually broken the record by 1.4 kilometers longer than them."

Since its completion, the Saemangeum dike has attracted over 3.5 million visitors.
And from this point on, even more visitors from both home and abroad are expected to flock to this one-of-a-kind structure.
Moreover, expectations are high that Saemangeum could further accelerate the region's various development projects.

source: Arirang news

Monday, 2 August 2010

Gangjin invites you to explore beautiful Goryeo celadon

Turning a potter’s wheel to shape porcelain is not something we can only see in a movie or on TV.

In Gangjin-gun (Gangjin County), Jeollanam-do (South Jeolla Province), you can do it yourself and have fun, too, where the mystic beauty of centuries-old Goryeo celadon can be admired at the 38th Gangjin Celadon Porcelain Festival, from Aug. 7 to 15.

During the nine-day festival, more than 100 events in five categories -- exhibition, performance, experience, project and sideline events -- will be held under the theme of "Earth, Fire and Human" around Goryeo Celadon Porcelain kilns in Gangjin County, where tourists can learn the art of making of modern-day pottery and view special exhibitions of high quality celadon works. (Left: five-meter tall pieces of celadon porcelain, photo courtesy of Gangjin Celadon Porcelain Festival)

To celebrate the opening of the event, about 100 ships will pass in a flotilla through Gangjin Bay on Aug. 7 at 5 p.m., creating a spectacular scene visible from the beach. The event venue will be decorated with celadon-shaped LED lights and five-meter tall pieces of celadon porcelain. A parade such as might be seen during the Goryeo Dynasty (A.D. 918-1392) will be held every day, with marchers wearing traditional Goryeo costumes.

Mudflat walks and ferry rides on Gangjin Bay using a traditional Goryeo cargo boat will also amuse tourists, while exhibitions of works by European and Korean potters will help people appreciate the beauty and have wider knowledge of different kinds of porcelain in the world. (Right: Ferry rides on Gangjin Bay , Yonhap News)

Visitors will have a chance to make their own piece of celadon pottery on a potter’s wheel, and also printing, coiling and sculpturing clay. This is just one of over 30 different and unique hands-on experience activities available during the festival, so take advantage of this opportunity.

Targeting summer vacation goers and their families, the festival aims to entertain visitors of all ages and backgrounds with its programs, such as a celadon photo contest, a singing contest for international students, a youth festival, celadon museum and a clay molding contest for children (Left: Overseas tourists making celadon pottery, photo courtesy of Gangjin Celadon Porcelain Festival)

Another attraction is shopping. Those who would love to purchase a piece for their collection can obtain high quality celadon at a 20-percent discounted price during the event period.

Also, festival organizers will provide coupons to visitors instead of selling admission tickets. These coupons can be used freely anywhere in Gangjin County, boosting the local economy. (Right: Celadon vase with inlaid crane and cloud designs (National treasure No. 68), Yonhap News)

Gangjin, also known as "Tamjin" in the past, is known as the home of Goryeo celadon, one of Korea’s most glorious cultural assets. For about 600 years from the 9th century, this was the manufacturing site of 90 percent of Goryeo earthenware, some of which has since been designated as national treasures. Over 200 out of Korea’s 400 historical traditional kilns are located around this area. Goryeo celadon is famous for its mystical gray-blue color and unique shape.

Last year, the Gangjin Celadon Porcelain Festival was selected as one of Korea’s best festivals by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism for the ninth year in a row.

For more information about the festival, click here (Korean, English, Chinese and Japanese) to visit the festival homepage. More travel information is available by calling Korea Travel Phone: Call+82-64-1330 (Korean, English, Japanese and Chinese available around the clock).

source:korea.net

Spending your summer with green tourism

In Hwacheon County, Gangwon Province, you will find “pyeonghwa eui dam”, literally means dam of peace. The county is trying to make the region a tourism site under the two themes of “green” and “peace.”


A 37.5-ton-bell is located in the park south of the dam (2nd photo). Don’t be surprised if you see a jet, tanks and other military facilities in the waterside area. They are for display only. Those items have been put together to form a “Peace Art Park”.


Not everyone is allowed to enter the northern side of the dam. You have to get permission from the Korean military prior to your visit. The upper region of the Hwacheon dam is part of Bukhan River and also Paro-ho Lake. You won’t see a car there.


Bisugumi Village (l) and Beopseonggol Stream (r)

source:Korea.net

Sunday, 1 August 2010

India, Korea take initiative in science



The ambassador of India is confident that 2010 will be a banner year for India and Korea.

"Korea and India have a long-term comprehensive partnership. It is more than an FTA and it also opens a way for investment," said India Ambassador Skand Tayal.

With the enforcement of the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement and the Program of Cooperation in Science & Technology agreement that came into effect last month, both countries have now entered a new phase of cooperation.

These agreements are also expected to help overcome the challenges both countries have been facing in making further developments in science and technology.

"Korea is very strong in manufacturing and engineering hardware. India is strong in innovation and information technology software," said Tayal. "We can both work together to develop new technologies.

"For India, we have to learn how to transfer technologies from the laboratory to a commercial application. For this, we want to learn from Korea."



As part of this initiative, the Indian Embassy has started a partnership with Daedok Innopolis, in Daejeon.

The deal will bring Indian experts together with their local counterparts in a regional cluster of scientific research, development and businesses.

Another goal of this partnership is to develop renewable energy, such as solar energy, wind energy, green growth technology and nuclear technology, which are important for both countries in preventing energy shortages in the global warming era.

For this partnership, the Korean government will allocate 5 percent of its gross domestic product into science research by 2012 and India`s government will encourage research in new sources of energy under their National Solar Mission.

The ambassador, who came here in 2008, still has high hopes for what he can accomplish in Korea.

"My vision is for real friendship and partnership - partnership in peace and prosperity, peace in the region, peace in governance, in different political issues, scientific technology, cultural and educational sectors," said the ambassador.

He also urged for a deeper mutual understanding between the people from both countries.

In terms of friendship, the India-Korea relationship dates back as far as Korea`s Gaya Kingdom, when an Indian princess from Ayodhya, known to Koreans as Huh Hwang-ok, came to marry King Kim Su-ro in 84 A.D.

Since the first consular relations in 1962, India and Korea have shown impressive results in terms of commercial trade, reaching $15.5 billion in bilateral trade by the end of 2008, according to the Korea International Trade Association.

Also, relations in the cultural and educational sectors have grown steadily in the past 40 years.

As of last year, over 6,000 Indians live in Korea with over 1,600 working as professionals, scientists and post-doctoral research scholars.

"This new (scientific) deal will open a new dialogue between Indian and Korean scientists, and scientific institutions in both countries," he said. "Earlier, it was done by individual effort under individual initiatives and there was no particular plan, but now the government and the institutions will come together."

"So it is the beginning and I am very hopeful that it will maintain and foster fruitful mutual relations."

South Korea signs on to finance first Jordan nuclear reactor

Jordan and South Korea have signed a $70 million loan agreement to finance the kingdom's first nuclear research reactor.

King Abdullah II of Jordan delivering a speech in Amman

King Abdullah II of Jordan delivering a speech in Amman on June 8, 2010.

Photo by: AP

The state-run Korean Atomic Energy Research Institute and Daewoo Engineering and Construction Co. are expected to start building a 5-megawatt reactor November 1 at the Jordan University for Science and Technology near the northern city of Irbid.

A planning ministry statement said Monday the reactor will be "fully commissioned within five years and a nuclear power plant will be built by 2017."

Resource-barren Jordan is developing a peaceful nuclear program with U.S. support. But the U.S. has expressed reservations over Jordan's desire to enrich its large reserves of uranium.

Jordan says alternative energy sources are needed to generate electricity and desalinate water.

Last month, Jordan's King Abdullah accused Israel of trying to prevent his kingdom from developing a peaceful nuclear program.

The king revealed in an interview with the Wall Street Journal that Israel had approached South Korea and France with requests to refrain from selling Jordan nuclear technology. Israel's "underhanded" actions are adding tension to already strained relations with Jordan, bringing ties between the two countries to their lowest point since they signed a peace agreement in 1994, the king said.

"There are countries, Israel in particular," Abdullah told the Wall Street Journal, "that are more worried about us being economically independent than the issue of nuclear energy, and have been voicing their concerns."

"There are many such reactors in the world and a lot more coming, so [the Israelis must] go mind their own business," he added.

Israeli officials denied any action to prevent Jordan from developing nuclear energy.

sorces:HAARETZ.COM

Couples bridge the divisions between Koreas


Northern women, southern men offer look at consequences of reunification

They first met at a matchmaking party in April 2008. Like the other men, Jang Seok-do, 43, handed out his business cards to a couple of ladies. One was Kim Hye-young, 37. After the party ended they got back to their lives. A few days later, Kim said she suddenly got the urge to call a few of the men who had given her their cards, but most of them sounded as if they’d already forgotten the light-hearted party where they exchanged glances over tea and cookies.

Jang was different. “He was extremely pleased to hear from me because there was no way for him to contact me without me reaching him first,” said Kim, her accent betraying her birthplace in North Hamgyong Province.

It was the beginning of a romance between a South Korean bachelor and a woman from the North who had crossed the border. The party where the two met was organized by the city of Anseong, Gyeonggi, to encourage marriages between South Korean men and North Korean female defectors.

Kim was a trainee at Hanawon, the government-run resettlement education center for North Korean escapees. She had no address or phone number of her own and was not allowed to leave the center. Jang had to come through a barbed-wire fence to see her.

“It seems improbable, but he lives right next to the center. So we could see each other’s faces through the fence,” recalled Kim.

“In fact, no one is allowed to approach [the center for security reasons], but the police knew him because he lives in Pumgok Village, which is a sister village of the center. Because of that he could come and see me.”

Jang Seok-do, left, is from South Korea, while Kim Hye-young, right, is from the North. They got married in March 2009. [YONHAP]
They were both a little older than the other couples, but they went through the same ups and downs in their 10-month relationship.

“We grew up in different cultures. It made me unsure about getting married to him in the first place,” Kim said.

The most difficult thing for Kim to understand was Jang’s credit cards. “In the North, we spend only if we have cash in our pockets. Jang had a couple of credit cards, and it was one thing that I couldn’t really understand.”

Kim found herself feeling sympathy for Jang as their relationship developed, though.

“I had no time to settle down as I wandered from place to place, but he grew older as he cared for his mother. He wanted to have a family of his own, but he was not an ideal spouse in the eyes of [South Korean] women here because of his sick mother.” Jang has cared for his mother for the past 12 years.

Jang’s bedridden mother reminded Kim of her mother who lived in extreme poverty in the North until she passed away.

“I was a bad daughter. Sitting up with Jang’s dying mother was a kind of compensation for me.”

Kim’s devotion to Jang’s mother helped the 43-year-old bachelor think of Kim as one woman he couldn’t let go. Kim also thought of Jang as a man on whom she could rely for the rest of her life. “If he’s good to his mother, I thought he would be good to me.”

The couple finally walked down the aisle in March last year and became one of a few so-called namnambungnyeo couples.

The term, which means “southern man, northern woman,” predates the division of the two Koreas. Traditionally it refers to the perfect couple, since northern Korea was believed to have the most beautiful women, while the southern part of the peninsula was thought to have more good-looking men.



The division of Korea into North and South brought new cultural connotations to the term. Now namnambungnyeo couples are depicted in stories of star-crossed love in dramas and films, but the concept has gained a new lease in real life with an increasing number of North Koreans - especially females - crossing the border since the late 1990s, when the North was struck by famine.

A South Korean man participates in a soccer game with a North Korean woman at an inter-Korean event held at Munhak Stadium in Incheon in June 2004. [YONHAP]
For example, 2,259 female and 668 male North Koreans settled here last year, according to Shin Sang-kyung, an official from the Unification Ministry.

“The North is a society where there is a sharp line between men and women. Most men belong to various organizations, and their movements are tracked.

“But for women, they have greater chance of mobility which makes it easier to escape,” said Shin. “Because of this, we started to see far higher number of female North Korean defectors than male defectors from 2002.”

One effect of this soaring number of female escapees is the growing number of matchmaking companies arranging dates between North Korean women and South Korean men.

“My main focus is Vietnam, Uzbekistan, China, Thailand and the Philippines, but I newly added North Korean women after receiving consistent inquires from South Korean men,” said a matchmaking company official who asked not to be identified. He promotes his company by leaving business card-sized flyers in subway cars.

Asked what makes South Korean men interested in women from the North, he said he didn’t want to talk about the issue further.

But Hong Seung-woo, who since 2006 has run a matchmaking company named Namnambungnyeo Marriage Information Company, had an answer.

Hong is one-half of a namnambungnyeo couple since marrying Kang Ok-sil, who came to the South in 2001.

His company, like several others, specializes exclusively in marriages between men from the South and women from the North. Hong said his company succeeded in matching about 300 couples so far.

“We receive phone calls from male escapees, but we only do marriages between South men and North women. If both men and women have nothing, it is just hard to live.”

Although North Korean defectors receive vocational training at the Hanawon center, most of them, especially men, find themselves doing menial jobs such as carrying bricks at construction sites. They also suffer from a high unemployment rate: 13.7 percent as of last December, far higher than the average 3.5 percent rate for all South Koreans at that time.

For this reason, marrying a South Korean man is an appealing way for women from the North to try to adapt to a new society. “I strongly recommend North Korean women get married to South Korean men, not to North Korean defectors, ethnic Koreans or Chinese. Otherwise, it is hard to live in this society,” said Kim Hye-young.

However, some South Korean men also prefer North Korean women for various reasons.

“When my wife and I launched this company years ago, our main clients were men in their mid- to late-30s, but we see men from diverse age groups come and seek advice from us these days.”

Hong remembers one 28-year-old male client. “He was deeply heartbroken after he realized his girlfriend was cheating on him. He said he was not going to see another South Korean woman after that.”

Hong receives as many as six phone calls per day from South Korean men. “Some say they are sick and tired of demanding South Korean women who keep urging them to buy pricey gifts such as luxury handbags. Some are children of people who used to live in the North before the Korean Peninsula divided. And some simply have fantasies about North Korean women,” Hong said.

The popular stereotype of a North Korean woman is pretty, pure, innocent and diligent, according to Choi Young-hee, who manages a matchmaking company named Namnambungnyeo Marriage Consulting. Choi, who came to the South from Pyongyang in 2002, was the first to open a namnambungnyeo matchmaking company in 2005. Since then, she said she has produced 416 couples. “Diverse types of matchmaking companies have been around for decades, but they are all for international marriages. I thought we [women defectors] needed one of our own.”

When asked about the divorce rates among namnambungnyeo couples, Choi said, “They all defect from the North by risking their lives. They don’t take marriage lightly as some South Koreans do.”

For six dates, men usually pay between 1.5 million ($1,250) and 2 million won, while women pay nothing, Choi added.



There are a few worrisome commercial undertones to the namnambungnyeo trend. Some sensational banners read “Let’s get married to North Korean women,” and “North Korean women never run away.” However, the Coalition for North Korean Women’s Rights, located in Sinwol-dong, Yangcheon District, western Seoul, sees some such matchmaking companies as supportive.

“Women escapees don’t need to pay for the service, and they are able to meet bachelors who are already filtered by managers from matchmaking companies. Since most women defectors want to get married and get settled here, we view it positively,” said Lee Eun-sil, an official from the coalition.

“Some worry about culture clashes between men from the South and women from the North, but we’ve seen more divorces from North Korean couples after they come to the South,” Lee said.

“Wives say they can’t put up with their husbands who tend to be patriarchal, which is said to be a common trait of North Korean men.”

Despite mixed views about namnambungnyeo, they are likely to increase in frequency in the near future. As of last year, four out of 10 bachelors living in rural areas in South Korea married brides from other countries such as Vietnam, Mongolia, China and the Philippines, according to the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family. Some local communities such as Inje County even hand out subsidies up to 6 million won to help bachelors within the county find overseas brides. But since some international marriages end in divorce due to language barriers and cultural differences, female North Korean defectors have advantages over other foreign brides.

Although the central government does not compile data regarding namnambungnyeo marriages, experts on inter-Korean issues say these couples might be a test to gauge the future of a unified Korea.

“Family is one of the closest relationships. In that sense, these couples would show what ideology and value conflicts might arise when North and South Koreans actually live together,” said Professor Lee Woo-young from the University of North Korean Studies.

“What we know about North Korea is very superficial and theoretical, and one could call these couples experiments.”

source: Jung-ang Daily

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