Alex Hahn
Alex Hahn was born in February 1941 in Seongbuk-dong, Seoul, the fourth of eight children. From his childhood, he remembers that his parents were businesspeople, selling rice and other grains—an entrepreneurial spirit which he inherited.
He also recalls two dreams he had as a youth: for the Korean War to end, and to be given the opportunity to study abroad in the United States. This opportunity arose through his successful fencing career, where he represented Korea at the World Fencing Championships in 1967 in Montreal; he also coached the South Korean Olympic fencing team.
After studying economics at Kyunghee University, Alex attended a fencing academy in Hollywood while working at a wig store in Los Angeles, before moving to the Bay Area, where he studied hospitality management by night and worked in a wig business by day.
He tells us that the particular hardships the first generation of Korean immigrants experienced revolved around an unfamiliarity with the language as well as the law. He recollects how the first businesses immigrant entrepreneurs opened were labor-intensive, such as grocery stores and restaurants.
And yet, Alex considers himself lucky to have accomplished all that he set out to do. After establishing a successful grocery chain in Oakland and coming into ownership of a shopping center in West Oakland, he hopes to continue building out the region’s robust Korean community.
He warns us against conflating success with money or power, instead encouraging us to live in harmony—and not transactionally—with our communities.
In collaboration with Koreatown Youth + Community Center of Los Angeles, 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 Korean Community Center of the East Bay for hosting this Legacy Project recording. Funding made possible by Korean American Community Foundation of San Francisco.