Letters to My Hometown: Lee Family



Ninety-year-old Chang Soon Lee sits before a computer to write a letter to the father he hasn’t seen in seventy-five years, a man who remained a distant but precious memory after their separation during the Korean War. Joined by his children, Bora and Bob, Reverend Lee recounts the deep-rooted courage of his own father—a minister who defied Japanese authorities to protect his parish—while grappling with the silence that defined his family’s history.
His son speaks with poignant honesty about a childhood felt in the shadow of his father’s emotional distance, yet poignantly highlights a transformative moment of reconciliation when Reverend Lee humbly asked for his forgiveness. From the streets of Pyongyang to the quiet reflections of old age, they explore the burdens of the “provider” generation and the grace found in late-life vulnerability.
Together, they consider how integrity and faith are transmitted across generations, proving that even a relationship once defined by absence can evolve into a lasting legacy of character and purposeful love.
The 75 years of division and conflict from the Korean War have not only affected the first generation, who still long for their hometowns in North Korea, but also younger generations who have no memories of the conflict, yet many of whom have inherited the weight of uncertainty and the mission of searching for missing relatives.
This iteration of Letters to My Hometown invites audiences to listen and reflect upon intergenerational conversations of the Korean American community whose divided families have sustained the traumas of their homeland’s partition. Generously supported by American Friends Service Committee (@afsc_org), these conversations aim to take steps toward transforming the intergenerational traumas of the Korean War into opportunities for collective remembering, learning, and healing.