A shy man hits the spotlight
SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korean human rights lawyer Moon Jae-in never felt comfortable at the Blue House when he was a top aide to the president. He quit in 2004, a year into the job, and went on a long hike in the Himalayas.
Although he would return to the presidential office a month later, the liberal idealist – who once dreamed of opening a pro bono law practice in a Korea reunified with the North – says he has always been uneasy in the limelight.
Now he has the eyes of 51 million South Koreans on him after exit polls projected he won a Tuesday election to succeed the ousted Park Geun-hye as president.
Recalling his life at the Blue House in 2003 through 2008, he said in his 2011 book Destiny: “I always felt uncomfortable. I felt that the job was not suitable for me, as if I was wearing clothes that did not fit. I always thought ‘I will go back to my place, a lawyer.’”
A close confidant and a top aide to former liberal President Roh Moo-hyun, Moon said it was his old friend’s apparent suicide in 2009 amid a bribery investigation into his family after his term in office ended, that drew him into electoral politics and eventually a run for the highest office.
Moon was born on January 24, 1953, during the Korean War, on Geoje Island off the southern tip of the peninsula. His parents had fled from the North during the war, sailing for three days on the deck of a US ship packed with refugees.
“I was thinking I wanted to finish my life there in Hungnam doing pro bono service,” he said in his book published in January, referring to the hometown of his parents on North Korea’s east coast.
“When peaceful reunification comes, the first thing I want to do is to take my 90-year-old mother and go to her hometown.”
As a law student in the 1970s, Moon was jailed twice during pro-democracy protests against the dictatorship of Park Chung-hee – father of Park Geun-hye – and his successor, Chun Doo-hwan. He was released from jail after passing a state bar exam.
As a conscript in South Korea’s special forces, Moon was part of mission that responded after North Korean troops murdered an American soldier with an axe in the demilitarized zone in 1976.
Moon joined Roh’s law practice in the city of Busan in 1982, defending democracy and labor activists during the rule of authoritarian military presidents.
“Moon had a distinctively nerdy style, reviewing papers after papers quietly as he prepared for court cases,” Seol Dong-il, who worked with Moon and Roh at the law firm, told Reuters. “When workers sought advice from him, Moon used to sit down for hours to listen to them.”
Moon cut short his trek in the Himalayas in 2004 when he read news in Nepal that parliament had passed an impeachment motion against Roh for allegedly violating election campaign laws. He returned to join a team of lawyers who successfully argued Roh’s case at the Constitutional Court, which overturned the motion.
Moon himself entered politics in 2012, winning a parliamentary seat in Busan, Roh’s old political base. Later that year, he ran for president, losing to Park by a slim margin. Moon faulted her for being walled off from the public and has pledged to turn the Blue House into a “resting space for the people.” Instead, he said he will work out of a 19-story government building in central Seoul.
“I will be a president that can share a glass of soju with the public after work,” he told reporters in April, referring to South Korea’s vodka-like liquor.
Moon, a Catholic, is married with a son and a daughter.