Gwang-hun Kim
Gwang-hun Kim is a doctor of Korean Medicine from Koreatown, Los Angeles, a community he has called home for the past 25 years of his life.
Gwang-hun describes himself and his childhood as being relatively “average”: born in South Korea, he tells us he had no particular dreams other than becoming a salaried worker. However, due to a change in circumstances, Gwang-hun immigrated to the United States in 2000, arriving in Koreatown, where he has lived and worked ever since. He recounts how he became rather unwell while settling into his new home: he was stressed, his body ached, and, carrying the burdens of being a first-generation immigrant, he was constantly fatigued. Though he was only in his early 30s, Gwang-hun noticed how lethargic he had become and began thinking seriously about his health.
Motivated by this turning point, he decided to pursue a career in traditional Korean medicine. Drawing from his own initial hardships as an immigrant navigating a complex and often opaque healthcare system, Gwang-hun is committed to paying it forward for others in his community, volunteering his massage and acupuncture services for sailors and dock workers at Long Beach Port who often return home with painful aches and muscle knots from performing labor while months away at sea.
Now in middle age, Gwang-hun believes that all of us have a responsibility to serve and shape our communities into environments we’d be proud to pass onto the next generation.
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.