Sue Park-Hur
Sue Park-Hur is the co-founder of ReconciliAsian, a non-profit peace center in Los Angeles which equips Korean diaspora and Asian American communities and churches with rehabilitative and transformative tools to be courageous peacemakers.
Born in Seoul, South Korea, Sue moved to Los Angeles with her family when she was eight years old; a dutifully hardworking 1.5-generation Korean American, Sue tells us that as a child immigrant, her job was “to do a good job.” Her relationship with her parents, as well as her immediate environment, strongly influenced her to pursue work in peace advocacy today: as the child of Korean immigrants who lived through and remembered the Korean War, Sue was acutely aware of the unique combination of stressors that burdened her parents.
During her sophomore year of college at UCLA, Sue witnessed how communities around her responded to the acquittal of the LAPD officers tried in the Rodney King case, and was disheartened by how the media portrayed the Uprising as a racial conflict that pitted communities against one another. She describes the memory of seeing her father take up arms alongside other Korean men, having realized that many of them were already familiar with firearms from their time in the Korean military. Some had even lived through the traumas of the Korean War, as did her father. She began thinking about how trauma could be transformed, and not transferred, wondering what that looks like within families, within churches, within communities.
With a background in both sociology and theology, Sue and her husband founded ReconciliAsian to advocate for conflict transformation, restorative justice, and healing—educating and promoting the culture of peacemaking and reconciliation within the Korean community.