Cape Times

Getting married to adapt in South Korea

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SOUTH Korea: On their second date last year, feeling a little drunk at a seaside restaurant, Kim Seo-yun let slip a revelation to her South Korean love interest. She had fled North Korea a decade ago, something that sometimes made her feel ashamed in a country where North Korean defectors can face discrimina­tion.

Her companion, Lee Jeong-sup, jokingly asked if she was a spy but then told her there was nothing wrong with coming from North Korea.

Lee proposed in March and in June, they got married at a Seoul hotel. Kim’s family, still in North Korea, obviously couldn’t attend.

“In South Korea, my husband is my everything. I have no one else here. He told me that he would play the role of not only my husband but also my parents,” Kim, 33, said.

It’s an increasing­ly common scenario.

More than 70% of the 33 000 North Koreans who have fled to South Korea are women, a reflection in part of North Korea’s tendency to more closely monitor men.

While there are no official numbers

on how many North Korean defectors have married South Korean men, a 2019 government-funded survey of 3 000 North Koreans living in the South suggested that 43% of married women were living with South Korean husbands, up from 19% in 2011.

Arriving from a nominally socialist, extremely repressive society, these women often struggle to adjust to fast-paced, capitalist­ic lives in South Korea. They also face widespread discrimina­tion, bias and loneliness.

Some said they looked to marry South Korean men because they thought they would help them navigate their sometimes bewilderin­g new lives.

“I feel like my marriage is letting me acclimate to this society more deeply without too much hard work,”

Hwang Yoo-jung, 37, said about her 2018 union with a South Korean man.

The number of matchmakin­g companies specialisi­ng in pairing North Korean women with South Korean men has seen an explosion, with 20 to 30 such agencies now operating, up from two in the mid-2000s.

“I get a big sense of achievemen­t from paring these couples because I also came here alone and know (the suffering) of other refugees,” said Kim Hae-rin, who runs a match-making agency in Seoul.

Many women who flee North Korea turn to matchmakin­g agencies, often run by fellow defectors, to find South Korean husbands. The companies typically charge South Korean men 3 million won ($2,520) for several blind dates in a year.

 ??  ?? NORTH Korean refugee Kim Seo-yun speaks during an interview alongside her South Korean husband Lee Jeong-sup at their house in Seoul, South Korea.
NORTH Korean refugee Kim Seo-yun speaks during an interview alongside her South Korean husband Lee Jeong-sup at their house in Seoul, South Korea.

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