Jae Hee Jun
Jae Hee Jun was born in a small rural village in South Chungcheong Province called Mongiya shortly before the outbreak of the Korean War. Her father, an elementary school teacher, attended seminary to become a pastor, after which he and his family moved to a small island near Mokpo, South Jeolla Province, a community which Jaehee remembers fondly. During the Korean War, her father was kidnapped, held captive, and later released by North Korean forces much to the relief of his family, who subsequently traveled back to their hometown under the cover of night.
There, she met her husband, Gil Sung Jun, at church, a man she describes as being sincere, honest, and dependable, and with whom she would immigrate to California. Although their lives were transformed by moving to the United States—rife with new challenges, anxieties, and exhaustion—she maintains that her faith gave her both the strength and hope to persist in her new life.
After working at a factory for a few years, the family eventually started a successful dry cleaning business through which they were able to buy a house, send their children to school, and build a church serving 1.5th-generation Korean Americans. Today, Jae Hee is a beloved grandmother who hopes to be remembered by her grandchildren as someone who is always praying for them, and expresses gratitude for a life guided by faith.
Special thanks to the American Friends Service Committee and the Korean American Foundation for sponsoring this Legacy Project interview.