"I am a ‘Chosun Person’, abandoned by both South and North Korea." After the liberation, the Joseon laborers moved to the Kamchatka Peninsula, the ‘Soviet Union’, for a living. They were filled with hope that after a few years, making enough money, they would come back to the motherland. However, as Korean War broke out, they never returned to their home. Dozens of people, who cannot stand the intense labor, had died out a day, but only buried en masse in ce...
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"I am a ‘Chosun Person’, abandoned by both South and North Korea." After the liberation, the Joseon laborers moved to the Kamchatka Peninsula, the ‘Soviet Union’, for a living. They were filled with hope that after a few years, making enough money, they would come back to the motherland. However, as Korean War broke out, they never returned to their home. Dozens of people, who cannot stand the intense labor, had died out a day, but only buried en masse in cemeteries without inscribing a gravestone with their names. Their only hope is to be buried in their homeland even if under the daisies.
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