David Soon Ho Kwon
David Soon Ho Kwon was born in 1936 in Kyoto, Japan, to a mother who worked as an assistant for a Japanese aristocrat. From his early childhood years, he recalls the day-to-day discrimination faced by Koreans living in Japan, from being denied healthcare at the hospital, to being the first medics which the Japanese Empire shipped off to serve in the treacherous Pacific front. His mother, who had been certified as a nurse, was among those called to serve in the South Pacific, though she managed to get herself and David out of the country by leveraging the language skills she had acquired while working for the aristocracy to pass as Japanese.
Soon after arriving in Manchuria, David’s mother found work as a nurse in a rural hospital, where she stayed until liberation. Though they had initially fled Japan to avoid certain death, the pair found themselves having to flee once more, this time settling in Shinuiju, a Korean border town, after hearing of locals who had been killing Japanese people in retaliation (they had been passing as Japanese). They soon crossed the 38th parallel in 1946 to settle in Seoul. Much later, in 1971, David moved again, this time to Chicago, to work as an engineer.
Through every border crossed and every identity assumed, the heart of David’s journey still remains the towering courage of his mother, who risked everything to ensure her son would one day no longer need to hide himself.
Special thanks to the American Friends Service Committee and the Korean American Foundation for sponsoring this Legacy Project interview.