Dr. Junwoo Kim
Dr. Junwoo Kim is a doctor of Oriental Medicine who also serves as the OMC Director at Dongguk University Los Angeles. Born in 1985 in Daegu, South Korea, he recalls having a rather peaceful childhood both before and after he immigrated to the United States as a high school student. When asked about his hometown, Dr. Kim tells us that he considers La Mirada home, and Los Angeles his second hometown.
Though he tells us that he did not feel “stressed” upon his move from Korea to the United States, he noticed that nearly everything—from the way society operates to the cultural expectations placed on others—was different from what he was used to. Studying biology in college, he was drawn to pursuing psychiatry because of his interest in treating psychological and emotional disorders using non-invasive methods, though he would later find his calling in traditional medicine, practicing whole-body therapy, a treatment approach which he describes as integrating Western and Eastern medical practices.
When asked what he sees as the largest difficulty for the field of traditional medicine, Dr. Kim says that it is largely the field’s reputation (or lack thereof) in states outside of California, where accredited licenses are harder to come by. He suggests that outreach for the practice can be achieved by insurers—who can opt to insure patients for traditional medical care—as well as by having practitioners engage with their communities more.
In collaboration with Koreatown Youth + Community Center (KYCCLA), Koreatown Storytelling Program is an intergenerational, multilingual and multiethnic oral history and digital media program that teaches ethnographic and storytelling techniques to high school students and elders to investigate cultural practices and racial, economic and health inequities in our community.
Special thanks to the Koreatown Storytelling Program (KSP) and the Koreatown Youth and Community Center of Los Angeles, California for hosting this Legacy Project recording.