Won Yun
Won Yun was born in 1940 in Sariwon, Hwanghae Province, later moving to Pyongyang where his ministerial father was called to serve. He spent a childhood filled with simple joys, like skating on the frozen Daedong River and eating his grandmother’s mung bean pancakes and naengmyeon, foods representative of his locale.
This peace was shattered during the January 4th retreat, when Won was separated from half his family and narrowly survived a B-29 bombing by hiding under a manhole—emerging to find that those in the underground shelter he couldn’t enter had not survived. After years of hardship in refugee camps, where his family often had to scavenge and boil scraps left by American GIs, Won moved to Daegu and finally to Seoul, where he met his wife in a church choir.
In 1965, Won arrived in Los Angeles with $100 and a one-way plane ticket bought by a family friend. He began his American life as a midnight dishwasher in Chinatown, often walking two hours home after his shift, until a move to New Jersey allowed him to finally practice architecture. The arrival of his wife in 1967 and their honeymoon at Niagara Falls marked the definitive transition from survival to a new chapter of happiness, heralded by newfound friends, a growing family, and a used Ford Galaxy.
Looking back on eighty years, Won views his life through the lens of his grandfather’s wisdom: that in a world of uncertainty, a person’s greatest assets are the good friends they choose to walk with. He wishes for his grandchildren to cherish their friendships, who might accompany them in their own lives.
Special thanks to the American Friends Service Committee and the Korean American Foundation for sponsoring this Legacy Project interview.