Gil Sung Jun
Gil Sung Jun was born in 1947 in South Hamgyong. When he was only two years old, his father, an underground resistance leader, was captured and killed by North Korean secret police.
His earliest memories follow the upheaval of the War: fleeing south with his mother and siblings, surviving a desperate refugee voyage aboard the “miracle ship,” and enduring hunger, illness, and poverty on Geoje Island. He reflects on being carried through these years by his mother, and on nearly dying from malaria.
Moreover, he reflects on the life-changing support he received from his American sponsor, Ms. Miller, whose letters sustained him through school and eventually inspired his immigration to the United States in 1972. When he finally met her decades later, he describes it as a moment of deep gratitude.
Now a grandfather, Jon speaks openly about the ache of growing up without a father and the longing that shaped his own journey into fatherhood. He wonders often, through the lens of his faith, whether he sought enough wisdom along the way. Today, he pours that hard-earned love and wisdom into his grandchildren, seeing in them the continuation of a legacy rooted in sacrifice, faith, and endurance.
Special thanks to the American Friends Service Committee and the Korean American Foundation for sponsoring this Legacy Project interview.