Joanna Kim Selby
Joanna Kim Selby was born in 1931 in Pocheon, Gyeonggi-do, during the Japanese occupation of Korea.
Because her father was an officer graduate of an Imperial Japanese university, his station had the family moving throughout Joanna’s childhood, and so she tells us that she does not have any one particular “hometown.” When she was 14 years old, she had entered an all-girls high school composed of both Korean and Japanese students when Hirohito announced Japan’s surrender, after which her family circumstances changed drastically.
In 1950, her family evacuated from Seoul to Busan, and when the Korean War ended, they returned to find their home riddled with gunshots (though some kimchi, which her mother had made and buried in their backyard, was still good to eat). With an eye toward working in social service, Joanna partook in a government training program that taught young women abroad; during her training, she briefly lived in Japan, the Philippines, and Hawaii before returning to Korea.
Back at home, she met her future husband, a Catholic relief service worker, who brought her to the United States. Wanting to expand her personal autonomy in a country with which she was culturally unfamiliar, she enrolled herself in an ESL course in Oakland, took a vocational exam, and was hired to work for the IRS. Living by an ethic of “making herself something,” she continued working after retiring from her federal job by serving on Alameda County’s Commission on Aging, where she secured grants toward the creation of a Korean senior center in the Bay.
Always happy to serve others, she expresses joy in the younger generation of Korean Americans she has met working for KACF-SF and hopes others will also choose a life of service.
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.