The Palm Beach Post

Tears, farewell embraces end initial round of family reunions

- By Kim Tong-Hyung

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA — As her two North Korean daughters, both in their 70s, wailed outside her bus, 99-year-old Han Shin-ja pounded the windows from inside in despair, moving her lips to say “don’t cry” and “farewell.”

As her bus left for South Korea on Wednesday, Han’s daughters chased the moving vehicle before being stopped by a North Korean official, a predictabl­e but no less heart-wrenching departure that’s likely to be the last time they see each other after decades of separation.

Han’s family was among hundreds of elderly Koreans who tearfully said their final goodbyes at the end of the first round of rare reunions between relatives separated by the 1950-53 Korean War.

About 200 South Koreans returned home after the end of three days of meetings with North Korean relatives at the North’s Diamond Mountain resort. Another 337 South Koreans will participat­e in a second round of reunions from Friday to Sunday.

The first set of meetings created highly emotional images of relatives weeping, embracing and caressing each other in a rush of emotions. Many of the South Korean participan­ts were war refugees who reunited with siblings or infant children they left behind, many of whom are now into their 70s.

At their final lunch meeting on Wednesday, 91-year-old Lee Ki-soon initially seemed lost for words as he shared a glass of “soju,” a vodka-like alcohol loved in both Koreas, with his 75-year-old North Korean son.

Lee later told his son, Ri Kang Son, “I am not your fake father. You have a father.” Ri replied: “Be healthy and live long. Then we can meet again,” according to pool reports.

An Jong Sun, a 70-yearold North Korean, carefully fed her 100-year-old South Korean father food. In the same large meeting hall, Kim Byung-oh, 88, quietly wept as his 81-year-old North Korean sister tried to calm him.

Nearby, Ri Chol, a 61-yearold North Korean, was also in tears as he grasped the hands of a 93-year-old South Korean grandmothe­r he was only just getting to know.

“Don’t cry, Chol,” an equally emotional Kwon Seok told her grandson.

Han told her two North Korean daughters to eat a lot of “chap-ssal,” or sticky rice, for health. She told them she would always pray for their happiness and also for the future of her North Korean great-grandchild­ren she never got to see.

Some relatives exchanged their phone numbers and home addresses, although the Koreas since the end of the war have banned ordinary citizens from visiting relatives on the other side of the border or contacting them without permission.

Shin Jae-cheon, a 92-yearold from the South Korean town of Gimpo, not far from the border, lamented that his 70-year-old North Korean sister lived less than an hour’s drive away all these years.

“It will take 40 minutes for me to drive there,” Shin told his sister, Sin Kum Sun, who lives in the North Korean border town of Kaesong. “The bus that goes to my home is No. 8. No. 8. The No. 8 bus,” Shin added, expressing a wish for his sister to come visit one day.

After organizers aired an announceme­nt that the reunions were officially over, Han and her daughters broke down. They wept, embraced each other and temporaril­y refused to leave their lunch table. Two North Korean officials politely separated Han from one of her daughters, 71-year-old Kim Kyong Yong.

After the South Koreans boarded the bus, workers brought steppers so that Han’s daughters could put their hands on the bus window, with Han doing the same on the inside of the glass.

After wiping off tears with a handkerchi­ef, Kim looked up toward his sister, smiled and created a heart with his arms. His sister, Kim Sun Ok, made the same gesture outside the bus.

 ?? LEE JI-EUN / YONHAP VIA AP ?? South Koreans on a bus wave at their North Korean relatives after the Separated Family Reunion Meeting at the Diamond Mountain resort in North Korea ended Wednesday. Another round of reunions is set for Friday through Sunday.
LEE JI-EUN / YONHAP VIA AP South Koreans on a bus wave at their North Korean relatives after the Separated Family Reunion Meeting at the Diamond Mountain resort in North Korea ended Wednesday. Another round of reunions is set for Friday through Sunday.

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