Khaleej Times

Rare chance to see long-lost family

- Victory SS Meredith

Have participat­ed in 20 rounds of reunions since 2000

seoul — Lee Soo-nam was 8 the last time he saw his older brother. Sixty-eight years ago this month the boy watched, bewildered, as his 18-year-old brother left their home in Seoul to escape invading North Korean soldiers who were conscripti­ng young men just weeks after invading South Korea to start the Korean War.

An hour later his brother, Ri Jong Song, was snatched up by North Korean soldiers near a bridge across Seoul’s Han River. Lee always assumed Ri died during the three-year war that killed and injured millions before a cease-fire in 1953, but his mother prayed daily for her lost son’s return, only giving up a few years before her death in 1975.

But Ri survived the war, living in North Korea. The brothers, now 76 and 86, will be among hundreds of Koreans who will participat­e, starting on Monday, in a week of temporary reunions of divided families. Many have had no contact with each other since the war cemented the division of the peninsula into the North and South.

The elderly relatives gathering at North Korea’s scenic Diamond Mountain resort know that, given the fickle nature of ties between the rival Koreas, this could be the last time they see each other before they die.

“I’m nervous. I’m still unsure whether this is a dream or reality. I just want to thank him for staying alive all these years,” Lee said in an interview in his home in Seoul, not far from where he last saw his brother.

Since the end of the war, both Koreas have banned ordinary citizens from visiting relatives on the other side of the border or contacting them without permission. Nearly 20,000 people have participat­ed in 20 rounds of face-to-face reunions since 2000. No one has had a second chance to see their relatives.

This week’s reunions come after a three-year hiatus during which North Korea tested three nuclear weapons and multiple missiles that demonstrat­ed the potential of striking the continenta­l United States.

At past meetings, elderly relatives — some relying on wheelchair­s or walking sticks — have wept, hugged and caressed each other in a rush of emotions. According to Seoul’s Unificatio­n Ministry, which handles inter-Korean affairs, more than 500 separated South Koreans and their family members will cross the border for two separate rounds of reunions between August 20 and 26. At Diamond Mountain, Lee expects to meet Ri and his 79-year-old North Korean wife and 50-yearold son. Lee will bring more than a dozen family photos, including a black-and-white picture of Ri in a buzz-cut when he was 16 or 17.

“That’s how I remember him,” Lee said. “I lost a brother and my parents lost a child, but my brother lost his parents, siblings, friends and an entire hometown, and he probably spent his whole life longing for all of those things. It’s heartbreak­ing to think about.”

The difference in the siblings’ family names is a product of the Korean Peninsula’s division — each country uses different English transliter­ation rules, so Lee in the South is spelled Ri in the North.

Many of the South Korean participan­ts in the reunions will be war refugees who were born in North Korea. Kim Kwang-ho, 79, was among some 14,000 refugees who were ferried to South Korea by the American freighter

in December 1950 in one of the world’s largest humanitari­an operations. —

I’m nervous. I’m still unsure whether this is a dream or reality. I just want to thank him (brother) for staying alive all these years

Lee Soo-nam, A South Korean 20K

 ?? Reuters ?? a man who has been selected as a participan­t for a reunion holds an old picture at a hotel in Sokcho, South Korea, on Sunday. —
Reuters a man who has been selected as a participan­t for a reunion holds an old picture at a hotel in Sokcho, South Korea, on Sunday. —
 ?? Reuters ?? a man shows pictures of his deceased mother and little brothers living in North Korea, in Sokcho, South Korea. —
Reuters a man shows pictures of his deceased mother and little brothers living in North Korea, in Sokcho, South Korea. —

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