(and yes, I shall work on my "video" skills!)
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Thursday, January 24, 2008
Once upon a time, in a far away land, a long, long time ago, there lived a beautiful woman named Nongae. Nongae was rather ordinary - beyond loving her husband so much that she felt his sorrows more deeply than her own. One day, a large, evil army conquered their valiant home city. Nongae’s husband fought gallantly to defend his home and survived the battle. However, after the battle was lost, he could not survive his despair at the loss nor the thought of living while his comrades did not and so Nongae’s husband ended his life. His wife spent many days weeping, inconsolable. And then she became angry, deeply angry. With nothing to loose and anger in heart, Nongae took a job as a professional female entertainer at a house of ill-repute that important officers of the evil army favored for drink and entertainment. The beautiful Nongae quickly established herself as a favorite of the commander of the entire evil army. One dark night with only a sliver of moon on the horizon, Nongae persuaded the commander to take a romantic walk near the river. They walked until they neared the location of a rock called “Danger Rock” by the locals, whereby Nongae seized the commander with all her strength and dropped them both against the rock, into the river, drowning the commander, depriving the evil army of its leader, joining her husband in death, and placing herself into legend.
The year of this story was 1593. The valiant city was Jinju. The evil army belonged to
Nongae’s time, the late 1500s, was a dark period for the whole of
But the Japanese refused to be cowed by their losses and their determination was especially bad for the city of
Finished with the fortress and with two hours remaining before my train departed, I slung my bag across my chest and ventured, on foot, a visit to the “Smoke Signal station in Mangjinsan,” figuring that a smoke stack would make a nice change from the usual Korean-style building tourist attractions. The uphill journey probably should’ve been strange: I passed a few small factories, a long row of small houses with blue roofs and rusted fences, a 5-story temple shiny with gold paint and framed by a modern apartment building, lines of clothes drying in the wind, and a brand new picnic pavilion, surrounded by stubby trees, overlooking the river. As I neared the hilltop and what I presumed would be the smoke stack, I began to hear music. Finally, I broke away from the stubby trees and found a music group, seated against an ancient smoke stack. Pious Christians? Budding rock stars? The sun was descending behind the smoke stack and yet the music group ended up being more interesting than the smoke stack, which disobligingly did not offer an English explanation of its history.
On my way down, I smiled at an old lady hobbling up the hill on a cane and thought, “I’ll bet she’ll pass me on the way down.” She did. And not because I stopped to photograph paintings on the temple! Korean old ladies are tough, tough.
As the sun set and the dusk fell upon the winter-brown countryside, I took a train to the city of
So long!
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
The city of
Ok, pause for a second here: have I ever, in your recollection, intimated that a city in
But further exploration and repeated self-admonitions didn’t improve my outlook so I began to cast about for an explanation or more likely, a rationalization. After all, ascetic beauty is subjective and rather shallow. Perhaps there was something more that I was looking for?
Consider this: cityscapes are our own graphic history books – their layers of history allow us to derive a place’s story based on its buildings. Personally, I feel that I learned this on rural roads leading to cities. Farm houses of gray cemented stones continue in fields as they have for hundreds of years. Light-colored churches with upfront steeples have pews polished by masses of Sunday best and ghosts of baptisms and funerals. Fenced in grave markers have their names worn away and yet are still able to speak of village inhabitants. Water wheels rest in rivers, attesting to early industry. All things move closer together as the city approaches, the houses shift to “McMansions” then boxy developments to single story wooden slats with picket fenced yards next changing to brownstones with character, eventually giving way to unrelieved apartment buildings. Factories smoke, supermarkets callout their sales, strip malls glare. Downtown, squatter skyscrapers boast shiny brass fittings and art deco points, towering glass boxes epitomize modernist ideals while post-modern buildings unashamedly mix all aesthetics. Together these buildings tell of a country, first formed of little agricultural communities and then came industry, perhaps a bit tardy due to civil war devastation but then full-throttle into progress with big and bigger factories and shifting homes into city apartments into today’s modern day metropolises, which sometimes are ugly, oftentimes dirty, and yet occasionally sublime. Through buildings I learned our history, our story almost without noticing. But even while taking considerable notice of everything, I found that I couldn’t form of a story of
I'm not saying that
Anyway, as I was saying, the city of
In fact, my best travel story of the week occurred first thing that morning. There was this moment when I found myself standing midway up one dusty hill, surrounded by other dusty hills, my hair lifted by a slight breeze, the buzz of farm equipment in the distance, on a path that seemed to lead nowhere, asking an old man with browned teeth for directions to an old bronze bell.
You see, the prospect of seeing one “Goryeo Bronze Bell of Samseonam” had seemed promising just a few minutes before when my taxi driver had driven straight to what seemed the correct district to see this ancient bell - the first sign of trouble came when he rolled down his window for directions. I wasn’t unduly alarmed by this as every old lady he asked seemed to have an opinion, chattering at the taxi driver and nodding her head knowledgeably, but the result of several opinions was only more driving.
It didn’t take long for me to realize that I was in the midst of what is euphemistically known as a travel adventure so I settled into the backseat just as the taxi took off across a cliff with unforgivably narrow road. Alarmed for the first time, I closed my eyes and hadn’t decided whether prayer would save us from toppling when we reached the other side. We spent several more minutes bumping over potholes and skittering over gravel until we dead-ended on a farm road, in an orchard with three old men chatting and squatting around a fire. My driver got out for another conversation with knowledgeable head nodding - and that is how I ended up midway up a dusty hill, with my taxi driver anxiously watching from the base of the hill to see if I’d locate this special bell. I was part up a most unpromising path when the man with browned teeth told me that the bell wasn’t at the top of the hill (I don’t know how I understood this but I did). The old man then shouted to my taxi driver and escorted me back down the hill. Now just along for the ride, I listened to their detailed discussion and eventually resumed the backseat. The taxi driver took off – backwards! – down the farm road, completing a u-turn just before cliff road. We safely inched along the cliff and after a few more minutes, located a traditional wooden Korean building over which a sign announced that this was the home of the Goryeo bell. But the gates were locked. I climbed out and circled, hoping to circumvent the gate, alert for an entrance and very alert because the neighbor’s dogs were madly barking at me. The bell was tightly locked away. My taxi driver found an intercom and rang. No one answered. He looked me. I looked at him. I sighed. I laughed. I gave into the inevitable. So I asked my game driver to instead take me to Jinjuseong - the city fortress.
(Oh, yes, there’s more. And lot of it! To be continued) --L
They are either quite short or quite tall - but neither do I find ascetically pleasing.
Monday, January 14, 2008
Sunday, January 13, 2008
So, as previously mentioned, the year’s first sunrise over Busan was magnificent. And the final sun set of 2007 was equally as magnificent just as friends and I were in the midst of repeating my New Year’s celebrations of 2007: a trip to the sea at Busan, an exquisitely fresh fish dinner at the market, the same Buddhist bell reverberating our cores at midnight, and marking a new day with the first sunrise of the New Year. But my friends and I improved upon last year first by venturing upon a ferry to ride alarming white waves along the coast and later by taking our post-sun rise Starbucks on the road southwest to explore some ostensibly beautiful islands. Our coffee was long gone by the time we crossed the bridge to one Geoje Do (pronounced Koh jay + “Do” means island in Korean) and sped through the curves of the coast, at every turn glimpsing the turquoise sea bracketed by hewn cliffs, racing to catch yet another ferry.
We became all smiles of relief as we stepped aboard a rocking passenger ferry. We peered through spotted windows and did our best to shut out the jabbering Korean tour guide over the very loud loudspeakers as the ferry launched itself towards distant outcrops flinging salty spray every which way. An escape from the loudspeakers came when passengers were invited to the deck of the ferry for an unhindered view of the jagged, towering edges of a rock island – for me, reminiscent though as not as exquisite, as any San Juan Island. We admired and snapped pictures as our ferry circled the island before returning to the cabin so that the ferry could pick up speed to an actual destination, a tiny island called Oe, a reputed paradise. I use the word reputed because tourist information in
I was not amazed. The sculptures are obvious imitations and there are likely more species at my admittedly unusual plant nursery in the States. That said, the island was well-planned and well-cultivated and there is a definite attractiveness to it. As we walked along a path framed by sculptured hedges, my Korean friend confided that, “In
After the ferry had returned us to the
From what we read, the camp was established and run on then-new-fangled 1949 Geneva Convention standards that mandated training prisoners in vocations and insisted upon quality prisoner diets (better quality than
Obviously, the museum did its job on me. While walking about and taking in the displays, I could’ve been repelled by the kitschy dummy re-enactments and frankly, I was repelled by the museum’s apparent fascination with graphic displays about how prisoners did not have toilets available (need I say more?). However, between crinkles at yet another P.O.W. squatting over a bucket, I became fascinated with what I could glean of the history of the camp. Although likely related to my recent first read of Lord of the Flies, I began to imagine that the history of the camp would make an excellent backdrop for a historical novel and come to find out, a Chinese-American author that I can recommend by the name of Ha Jin has written a novel titled War Trash which wades into the midst of the camp’s history. You can bet that’ll be on my Amazon list!
Anyway, as the sun began to set, albeit less spectrally than the day before, we departed from the museum. We left the beautiful islands behind and set course for a nearby city bus terminal, where my friends would leave me and my backpack to explore while they drove home to necessary jobs and comfortable beds.
I caught a bus to the city of
새해 복 많이 받으세요- Happy New Year!
Laura
Saturday, January 12, 2008
The year’s first sunrise over Busan was magnificent. I don’t know if you recall my version of the beginning of 2007, when we rang a Buddhist bell at midnight and watched over Busan’s horizon for the sun’s first appearance of 2007, but the sun did not appear to rise that day last year. At the time, I was likely too dazzled, perhaps by the moment, perhaps by the strange beauty of
As always, it has been too long since I have posted to this blog. For better or for worse, I post most when I spend time with my own thoughts – so much time alone that my thoughts must be spilled. Consequently, I end up frantically typing for hours which results in my depositing my accumulation here. More like my busy daily life in
But another, more complicated inhibitor to my needing and wanting to write for this blog is, uhmmm… well… this may sound strange, but another inhibitor to this blog is my ability to assess and write about Korea accurately, honestly. You see, it does not take long to for a visitor to
This is indeed a paradox. It makes my brain hurt. Ouch.
But the larger problem for me in writing about my life in
Once I put my truth-telling dilemma to my Korean English teaching peers. I asked, “How shall I share
Their initial reaction was a thoughtful, almost sad silence. The silence itself a confirmation of my understanding, of my dilemma. Finally, one peer said, “I think you should tell the truth. It is true that we want the world to regard
But I shall miss the next first sunrise, magnificent or not, over the
Love,
Laura