Monday, August 11, 2008

Hi Seoul Festival

The weather for the past week has been great. It's been very hot. Sunday was 35 degrees, but felt like 42, apparently. All last week, it was sunny with blue skies. It rained a little yesterday, and it's been a little cooler since.

The pic of the week shows Clara, Norah and Sarah at the Hi Seoul festival which we went to on Sunday.

Hi Seoul Festival
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This is a free festival put on every year in a park by the Han river. Clara prepared a picnic and we had a fantastic day. There were traditional bands, people on tandems, people with homemade planes crashing into the Han, gymnasts spinning under hot air balloons, jazz, brass bands, and it ended with a couple of very spectacular shows on the main stage. One was a macnas-type display with huge fish puppets and musicians playing violin and guitars while spinning around the stage suspended on wires. Then there was a monster ballet, where the story was told with a mixture of dancers and JCBs, with the ballerina's and JCB drivers taking the applause together at the end. The opening ceremony of the Olympics wasn't in it.

The Korean War
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Before I came here, M*A*S*H was the only thing I knew about the Korean war, and it turns out that that was really a parody of Vietnam but they had to change the location. I've discovered a little more about it now I'm here, mostly
from a trip to the war museum. At the end of World War II Korea had been liberated from Japan by the Allies. Russia controlled the North, above the 38th parallel (the 38 degrees north latitude line), and the US controlled the South. Both put governments in place. Then in June, 1950, the North invaded the South in a surprise attack. The superior forces of the North quickly gained control of most of the South, until a UN force drove them back. After a period of gains and losses for both sides the South then got the upper hand, and gained most of the territory in the North. Then Chinese troops poured across the border and fought on the side of the North.

Eventually both sides were in stalemate, and a de-militarised zone, the DMZ was set up, and that remains the border between the two states. Officially, the war is not over, and both sides are on ceasefire since 1953.

So older people here lived through the war. Seoul was evacuated twice, and people had to live in refugee camps in Busan. Now the living conditions between the wealthy South and impoverished North are incredibly different.

On the city tour, they refer to Korea as the world's last remaining divided country!

They've tried to get closer, particularly during the administration of the last South Korean president. Tourists can even go into certain parts of the North from the DMZ. A couple of weeks ago, though, a woman from Seoul was on a tour in the North, and was shot by a North Korean soldier in unexplained circumstances. So tensions right now are higher.

Bush was here during the week. There were demonstrations both pro- and anti-, but the heat seems to have gone out of the American beef issue.

Bakery bag of the week
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I came home the other day from the bakery, and noticed this written on the bag: This fresh dessert with original goodness and flavor that something delicious for every one and sweets make a very special. So there.
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That's it for this week. Work is going fine, except that the kindergarten classes are doing my head in!

So until next week,

Éamon

Today's headline from The Korea Herald: Park Tae-hwan wins silver in 200-meter freestyle

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