Bangkok Post

Families set to reunite after 70 years

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SOKCHO: Dozens of elderly South Koreans gathered excitedly yesterday on the eve of their first meeting for nearly seven decades with family members in North Korea.

The three-day reunion — the first in three years — begins today at the Mount Kumgang resort in North Korea, following a rapid diplomatic thaw on the peninsula.

Millions of people were swept apart by the 1950-53 Korean War, which divided brothers and sisters, parents and children and husband and wives and perpetuate­d the division of the peninsula.

Among them was Lee Keum-seom, now tiny and frail at 92. She was waiting to see her son for the first time since she left him behind in the turmoil of war.

She lost her husband and four-yearold son as their family fled to the South with only her infant daughter — who was accompanyi­ng her to the reunion.

The son, now 71, will bring his daughterin-law to the meeting.

“I don’t know what I’m feeling, whether it’s good or bad,” Ms Lee said. “I don’t know if this is real or a dream.”

She raised seven children after remarrying in South Korea but always worried about the son she left in the North. Now there are many questions to ask.

“Where he lived, who he lived with and who raised him — because he was only four,” she said.

Because the conflict ended with an armistice rather than a peace treaty, the two Koreas have remained technicall­y remain at war. All civilian exchanges — even mundane family news — are banned.

Since 2000 the two nations have held 20 rounds of reunions but time is running out for many ageing family members.

More than 130,000 Southerner­s have signed up for a reunion since the events began but most of them have since died. Most of those still waiting are over 80 and the oldest participan­t this year is 101.

With a few people dropping out at the last minute for health reasons, 89 elderly South Koreans — accompanie­d by relatives — gathered in Sokcho city on South Korea’s northeast coast to spend the night before heading to the heavily-fortified border that has taken them decades to cross.

Ms Lee is one of the few parents reuniting with a child.

Some of those selected for this year’s

reunions dropped out after learning that their parents or siblings had died and that they could only meet more distant relatives whom they had never seen before.

But Lee Kwan-joo, 93, said he would meet his nephew and niece to get a sense of the life that his parents and six siblings had led in the North before they died.

Mr Lee in 1945 went to school in Seoul, away from his family in Pyongyang, and the war made the separation permanent.

“I was delighted to hear about my nephew and niece, even though I don’t even know their faces,” Mr Lee said. “I just want to ask them how my brothers, sisters and parents passed away.”

Over the next three days, the participan­ts will spend only about 11 hours — mostly under the watchful eyes of North Korean agents — with their relatives in the North.

And on Wednesday the families will be separated once again — in all likelihood for a final time.

 ??  ?? Participan­ts undergo a medical check as they arrive at a hotel serving as a gathering point ahead of the inter-Korean family reunion in Sokcho yesterday.
Participan­ts undergo a medical check as they arrive at a hotel serving as a gathering point ahead of the inter-Korean family reunion in Sokcho yesterday.

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