Letters to My Hometown: Roh Family
Haesoon Koh and Moohong Roh are joined in conversation by their son, Michael, in reflections on his grandparents, who were separated from their families during the Korean War. For all of them, the journey to the South was long and arduous; Mrs. Koh speaks of her mother, who arrived in Busan by way of trains, ox cart, and her own feet. The eldest of eight children, her mother never had the opportunity to meet six of her younger siblings. Mr. Roh’s father arrived in the South alone, praying for the day he might see his relatives again.
As the children of North Korean refugees, Michael’s parents describe how the refugee community had to form their own associations, banks, and churches after settling in Seoul due to subtle strands of discrimination. Perhaps this pervasive feeling that Seoul was not their hometown, Mr. Roh conjectures, is why many refugees chose to relocate a second, and even third, time to other countries. With poignant han, Mrs. Koh wonders if Michael’s generation may serve as a bridge not just between North and South, but between Korea and the U.S. in achieving tenable peace and reconciliation.
The 75 years of division and conflict from the Korean War have not only affected the first generation, who still long for their hometowns in North Korea, but also younger generations who have no memories of the conflict, yet many of whom have inherited the weight of uncertainty and the mission of searching for missing relatives.
This iteration of Letters to My Hometown invites audiences to listen and reflect upon intergenerational conversations of the Korean American community whose divided families have sustained the traumas of their homeland’s partition. Generously supported by American Friends Service Committee (@afsc_org), these conversations aim to take steps toward transforming the intergenerational traumas of the Korean War into opportunities for collective remembering, learning, and healing.