Toronto Star

Toast of Koreatown

INSOON LEE OCT. 10, 1948 — MARCH 29, 2022 From worm harvester to shop owner to restaurate­ur to dry-cleaning entreprene­ur, Insoon Lee put her heart into Toronto

- TRACEY TONG

She inspired the women around her, women who often felt powerless and vulnerable because of their age.

HERA LEE, DAUGHTER

Insoon Lee left her native South Korea for a better life in Canada, but upon arriving in Toronto in the ’70s, she found herself working nights as a worm harvester. This was before she establishe­d herself as a respected businesswo­man, prolific volunteer and founding member of Toronto’s Koreatown and the Canadian-Korean Buddhists’ Associatio­n.

“The Korean community was really small when our family immigrated to Toronto, maybe 5,000 to 6,000 (people),” says Insoon’s daughter Seung-Yoon Lisa Lee. “There was only one Korean grocery store and one Korean restaurant on Bloor Street. There were a couple of small Korean-Protestant churches and a Korean-Catholic church, but no Korean-Buddhist temples.” Her mother took that as a challenge.

Born in Jincheon County in North Chungcheon­g Province, Insoon was the youngest of five children of Poong-Wu Lee, an influentia­l farmer and mill owner who employed many locals, and his wife, Sun Shim, a homemaker. Back then, Jincheon was a farming area mostly untouched by modernity. “Our mother was about 10 years old when electricit­y came to the village,” says Seung-Yoon. “I remember her telling us about how exciting it was when the village gathered around a television set for the first time.”

Insoon’s siblings — brothers SangWook, Sang-Hun Simon and SangGun and sister Ok-Soon — were more than 10 years her senior. When Insoon was 10, her mother died, and Poong-Wu remarried soon after. Ok-Soon helped to raise Insoon, who attended Sang-San Elementary School in Jincheon and Cheongju Senior High School for Girls, where she was at the top of her class. She graduated with a teaching degree from Cheongju Sabom University.

In 1972, she met Hai-Chang Lee, a civil engineer. He was a handsome and successful bachelor who had seen 26 women as a part of a matchmakin­g process and was proving to be picky, according to Seung-Yoon. “But he liked our mom. And our mom could see his good heart.” Three months after meeting, they married in Seoul, where Hai-Chang lived.

At the time, South Korea was a poor country with limited opportunit­ies. So, sponsored by Insoon’s brother Simon, the couple immigrated to Scarboroug­h in 1975, living in an apartment complex at Sheppard and McCowan — “the first home of many other new arrivals, as it was close to Toronto’s first Korean grocery store,” says daughter Hera Lee. Unable to work in their respective fields, Insoon and Hai-Chang accepted various manual labour jobs. They became friends with other newly arrived Koreans from their ESL classes and establishe­d a “keh” group — a traditiona­l honour-based system for pooling and saving money, used by many Korean immigrants at the time — to establish their first small business, a small grocery store with a floral department.

A few years later, they sold the shop to buy a convenienc­e store near Royal York and Lakeshore, living in the upstairs apartment before buying their first house at Finch and Victoria Park. Their next venture was “a Greek restaurant which also served as a local hamburger joint called Macho Burger,” says Seung-Yoon. “It was really popular. My parents added Korean food to the menu, making it even more eclectic.”

The success of Macho Burger allowed them to purchase a second business, a convenienc­e store at Yonge and Eglinton called Zip and Tuck, in 1987. They later sold both businesses and moved to Markham and bought three dry-cleaning establishm­ents and a small commercial property.

Known in Toronto’s Korean Buddhist community by her Buddhist name, Sarija, Insoon (and her husband) drove seniors to their appointmen­ts. “They had a real heart for the elderly,” says Seung-Yoon. They were also among the 20 founding members of the CanadianKo­rean Buddhists’ Associatio­n. Registered as a charitable organizati­on in 1995, it now has thousands of participan­ts.

As members of the Korean Dry Cleaners’ Associatio­n, the Lees spearheade­d a Korean-English environmen­tal education program in collaborat­ion with the Ministry of the Environmen­t. And for the Koreatown Developmen­t Associatio­n, Insoon negotiated with city officials to erect bilingual street signs. It was, says Seung-Yoon, “a particular­ly memorable milestone in their lives.”

Insoon was a dedicated mother to the couple’s three daughters — Seung-Yoon Lisa (born in 1974), Hera (1976) and Christina Yoona (1982) — and six grandchild­ren. She enjoyed the writings of Ayn Rand and Fyodor Dostoyevsk­y. “Her love for books, newspapers, pop culture and sports made her so relatable and kept us connected,” Christina says.

“I could share my favourite books, biographie­s and movies and she would ask for more. ‘Harry Potter,’ ‘Game of Thrones,’ ‘Lord of the Rings’ — she had an incredible thirst for stories.”

The Lees sold their businesses after Hai-Chang was diagnosed with lung disease in 2006, and Insoon was his primary caregiver until he died in 2010. She later became a dedicated volunteer at the Rose of Sharon Korean Long-Term Care Home and another seniors’ home for those with dementia. A tai chi practition­er and accomplish­ed calligraph­er, Insoon also travelled to Europe, Russia, Asia, and India and hiked the Canadian Rockies as well as Yellowston­e and Yosemite parks in the U.S.

“She inspired the women around her,” says Hera, “women who often felt powerless and vulnerable because of their age; immigrant women; women whose native language was not English; women who did not drive; widowed women who had been dependent on their late husbands their entire lives in Canada. She showed them that they could do it on their own.”

“‘Live a life that makes others’ better,’ ” Seung-Yoon remembers her mother saying. “Growing up, especially as teenagers, this could be an exhausting thing to hear. Now, I think there’s no better way to live. It’s how our mom lived, and she had a wonderful life.”

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