Kamis, 12 Agustus 2010

AAK! PSA: Make Your Own Korean Liquor

Do you dream of Korean moonshine? Then here is Ms. Minji Park:

Dear Korean,

I write on behalf of Susubori Academy, a traditional Korean liquor education center sponsored by Kyonggi University and FACT (Foundation of Agritech Commercialization & Transfer). Susubori is a brand new school, and we are having an opening event where we will be offering a two-week mini course in English. We're giving ten hours of instruction, all ingredients, a container for you to take your liquor home, and some side dishes for only 50,000 won.

I am writing to you because I think this kind of course would be interesting to your readers, and it would be great if you could mention us on your blog. Naturally we'd also be delighted if you could join one of our classes, either now or later.

Sincerely,

Minji Park


The brochure is attached below.


Got a question or a comment for the Korean? Email away at askakorean@gmail.com.

Rabu, 11 Agustus 2010

Ask a Korean! News: Japanese Prime Minister Apologizes for the Colonial Rule

First, the news:
Prime Minister Naoto Kan of Japan offered a renewed apology to South Korea on Tuesday for Japan’s brutal colonial rule, as part of a statement marking the 100th anniversary of his nation’s prewar annexation of the Korean Peninsula.

For the enormous damage and suffering caused during this colonial rule, I would like to express once again our deep remorse and heartfelt apology,” Mr. Kan said in a statement, issued ahead of the Aug. 29 centenary of Japan’s annexation of Korea. The text largely repeated language Japan has used since the early 1990s in apologies to South Korea and other Asian victims of its early-20th-century military expansion.

...

In a sign of the difficulties this nation still faces in holding a healthy debate about the repugnant periods of its history, the prime minister’s statement on the colonial era drew sharp criticism from conservatives. Tabloid newspapers blasted the apology as “treasonous diplomacy,” while right wing groups loudly protested in front of the prime minister’s residence in central Tokyo.

In Tuesday’s statement, Mr. Kan offered to return historical documents and other cultural artifacts taken from the Korean Peninsula during Japan’s 1910-45 rule. Mr. Kan said he wanted to address the past in order to build a more forward-looking relationship with South Korea, a country with which Japan now enjoys extensive trade, cultural and political ties and whose music and television shows it avidly consumes.
Japan Apologizes to South Korea on Colonization [New York Times]

The Korean applauds Japan for taking a step in the right direction, but is disappointed that it is only a step and not a stride like it should have been, on the year as significant as the century mark of the occupation. Most Koreans appears to have reacted the same way as the Korean did -- they have seen this show before, and there is not too much to get excited over.

It is commendable that this round of apology was not just words, but came with some level of specific actions. Returning documents and artifacts is a pretty solid move, and a step forward from the 1993 apology which ultimately did not amount to much more than mere words. But at the 100-year mark, something much more significant needed to happen. And it is not as if what Japan does not know what it needs to do. It needs to clearly address the big historical issues -- such as the annexation's illegality, comfort women, remaining territorial disputes, discrimination against Korean-Japanese, whitewashing its textbooks, and attempts to revise and glorify its imperialistic past (e.g. by attending the Yasukuni Shrine.) At the very least, it could have revisited the crass decision earlier in this year to pay 99 yen (about $1) to compensate Korean forced laborers. But none of this happened.

In this respect, the Joint Statement of Scholars issued by scholars from both Japan and Korea was much more honest and courageous, since it challenged Japan’s current interpretation of history. It clearly stated that the Annexation Treaty was illegal and invalid from the start, contrary to the official position of the Japanese government. In contrast, this round of apology by Prime Minister Kan implies nothing about the change in the official position. So, regardless of the apology, the emperor of Korea in 1910 voluntarily handed over his country without any coercion (like invading his palace and killing his wife, the queen) as far as the Japanese government is concerned. Reflecting this unchanged position, even the stolen documents and artifacts are not "returned" (反換) to Korea but are "conveyed" (おわたし) to Korea, lest the word should suggest that Japan was not entitled to take the documents and artifacts in the first place.

The Korean, personally, sympathizes with Prime Minister Kan. He believes that Kan did the best he could under the given circumstances of his domestic politics. In fact, the Korean believes that Koreans would be better served to recognize the segment of Japanese population that is honest and forthright about their past, instead of crudely hurling invectives wholesale whenever the historical issues arise, as some Koreans are wont to do. If Koreans give credit to whom credit is due, it would encourage those Japanese to continue their endeavor and move farther along in persuading the Japanese public at large. In that spirit, the Korean would like to recognize that Prime Minister Kan, former Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama and Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshito Senkoku were particularly brave to persevere and do the right thing.

But the fact that this was the best that Prime Minister Kan could do serves as an indictment on Japan as a whole. At the end of the day, the Japanese government is unable to make a truly meaningful apology and reparation because the Japanese people, as a whole, do not think their country did anything wrong. Indeed, certain segment of Japanese people are all too happy to brand the apology (which does not really change much of the status quo) as "treason," because they genuinely believe that Japan did Korea a favor by annexing it and Prime Minister Kan is apologizing over nothing. This is simply a stunning case of willful historical blindness.

This is why the Korean is not confident that this apology will have a positive impact that will last, even though he believes that the heart of Prime Minister Kan and many Japanese people is at the right place. Because of the considerable portion (if not the majority) of Japanese population that does not think the Imperial Japan did anything wrong in the early 20th century, sooner or later another thing will arise in Japan which will surely make a mockery of any contrition shown in this apology -- like the insulting payment of 99 yen to former forced laborers. That is a pity, and unbecoming of a great nation like Japan.

Got a question or a comment for the Korean? Email away at askakorean@gmail.com.

Selasa, 10 Agustus 2010

50 Most Influential K-Pop Artists: 49. Clazziquai Project

[Series Index]

Two in a row? Why not? The Korean is on a roll, and good music makes him happy.

49. Clazziquai Project [클래지콰이 프로젝트]

Years of Activity:  2004-present

Members:
DJ Clazzi (Kim Seong-Hoon [김성훈]) - Mixing, producing
Alex (Alexander Hyeon-Gon Chu [추현곤]) - Vocal
Horan (Choi Su-Jin [최수진]) - Vocal
Christina (Christina Yeong-Ju Chu [추영주]) - Vocal (regularly featuring guest)

Discography:

Regular Albums

Instant Pig (2004)
Color Your Soul (2005)
Love Child of the Century (2007)
Mucho Punk (2009)

Special Albums

Remix - Pinch Your Soul (2006)
Robotica (2007)
Metrotronics Original Soundtrack (2008)
Remix - Mucho Beat (2009)

In 15 Words or Less:  World-Class electronica band who made the genre mainstream.

Representative Song:  Futuristic, from Instant Pig (No translation necessary!)


Futuristic

We are in virtual loving time
And I am thinking what a mess
All I want from you baby is just a little dance
I know the world we're living in
All these things we do
You want me I want you 
You hold me you love me

Now now let me out 
I want to take you in my arms I want to feel
Now you dance with me 
Come to meet my arms
Now I set you free 
I want to look in to your eyes to see the magic
Now now come on out 
Futuristic dance yeah

We are in virtual loving time 
We are moving and moving and moving
And the future will make me into a fusion girl

I know the world we are living in
All these things we do
You want me I want you 
You hold me you love me

Now now let me out 
I want to take you in my arms I want to feel
Now you dance with me 
Come to meet my arms
Now I set you free 
I want to look in to your eyes to see the magic
Now now come on out 
Futuristic dance yeah

All this time our love is 
Making you and I
Your kiss and your breath 
Turn me on turn me on... now

Now now let me out 
I want to take you in my arms I want to feel
Now you dance with me 
Come to meet my arms
Now I set you free 
I want to look in to your eyes to see the magic
Now now come on out 
Futuristic dance yea

(Dancing for your love)


Maybe they should have been ranked higher because...  Out of the 50 who are ranked in this list, few can be legitimately considered "world class".

Maybe they should have been ranked lower because...  It is too soon to tell what their imprint will be.

Why is this band important?
Even without regard to its music, the manner in which Clazziquai elevated to its current fame is significant in and of itself. In 2000 when illegal download of mp3 (a new technology at the time) was decimating the music market, DJ Clazzi opened a simple website that did not have much other than his music, which could be freely shared. Of course, DJ Clazzi was not the first to set up such a website -- but he likely is the first K-pop artist who actually became successful that way. The sophistication that he had shown on the free samples on his website was quite enough to lure several big label executives of Korea to make a trip out to Canada. (Kim Seong-Hoon, a.k.a. DJ Clazzi, is a Korean-Canadian who immigrated during his high school years.) By the time the band's first album was released in 2004, the grassroots support for the band was strong enough to overcome the general depression in the music recordings market. In short, Clazziquai embodies the new model of artistic success in the Internet era, in which talent simply wins out in the democratized field.

And what talent that was. Techno/electronica in Korea may as well be divided into two eras -- pre-Clazziquai, and post-Clazziquai. Electronica made occasional appearance in K-pop previous to Clazziquai, but it was never pursued for the sake of itself. Instead, it was essentially a ploy for a singer to bring something different simply for the sake of bringing something different. K-pop "musicians" cheaply purchased electronica to spice up their tired repertoire, and threw it away just as cheaply. Clazziquai is the first band that seriously pursued techno/electronica as an objective rather than using it as a tool. It is regrettable that K-pop had to wait until 2004 to have a band like Clazziquai, but the quality of Clazziquai's music was worth the wait. Clazziquai -- like Jamiroquai to which its name pays homage -- has always pursued music that was relaxed yet groovy. Its music is calm but complex. It is danceable without being intrusive. It can be legitimately considered a world-class band.

But for the purpose of this list, Clazziquai's crowning achievement is not simply that they made high-quality music, but that they made high-quality music accessible, and even popular, among regular Koreans. For all of its artistic merits, Clazziquai never developed the haughty (and ultimately toxic) attitude that their music was too good for the masses, like the way certain other talented members of K-pop pantheon did. While never sacrificing quality, Clazziquai nonetheless made their music (and themselves) easily accessible to Korean public. Making an average Korean music fan to have better appreciation for newer and more sophisticated music might be the greatest legacy that Clazziquai will leave behind, even after their already-promising career comes to a grand conclusion.

Interesting Trivia:
- DJ Clazzi's music education served as an excellent foundation for his later career as a fusion musician. As a child, he learned classical music from his mother. Once immigrated to Canada, he played piano in the school jazz band, and majored in jazz and music technology in his college years.
- Alex and Christina are siblings.
- Metrotronics was a soundtrack made specifically for a DJ Max Portable 2, a music game for PSP.

Got a question or a comment for the Korean? Email away at askakorean@gmail.com.

Minggu, 08 Agustus 2010

50 Most Influential K-Pop Artists: 50. Pipi Band/Pipi Longstocking

[Series Index]

Finally, the 50 Most Influential K-Pop Artists series kicks off in earnest. The series will progress by providing a fairly detailed look at each artist's music career, such that by the time this series is over the reader can have a workable knowledge of K-pop history and its major players. If you have have not already, the Korean high recommends reading the earlier parts of this series to place the ranked artists in proper context.

Just to remind everyone, this list is arbitrary and capricious to the Korean's whim, and reflects the Korean's many biases. But that does not mean it is completely off the reservation -- much thought went into trying to make this list as objective as possible. To help organize the ranking, the Korean divided the 50 artists into four tiers: Legends, Best of an Era, Strong Impact and Notables. As we start from the bottom, here is the first of the notable K-pop artists.

50. Pipi Band [삐삐밴드]/Pipi Longstocking [삐삐롱스타킹]

Years of Activity: 1995-1997

Members:
Lee Yoon-Jeong [이윤정] (Vocal - in Pipi Band)
Kwon Byeong-Joon/Goguma [권병준/고구마] (Vocal - in PiPi Longstocking)
Kang Gi-Yeong [강기영] (Bass)
Park Hyeon-Joon [박현준] (Guitar)

Discography:
Cultural Revolution [문화혁명] (1995)
Impossible Mission [불가능한 작전] (1996)
Red Bean Fish Buns [붕어빵] (1996)
One Way Ticket [원웨이 티켓] (1997)
Pipi Band Pipi Longstocking: The Complete Best [삐삐밴드 삐삐롱스타킹 The Complete Best] (2004)

In 15 Words or Less:  La Resistance of the Weird.

Representative Song:  Strawberry [딸기], from Cultural Revolution



딸기
Strawberry

설탕에 찍어 딸기를 먹었어
Had a strawberry dipped in sugar
딸기밭에서 하루종일 놀았어
Played all day at the strawberry field
한참을 놀다보니 하루가 다갔어
Played for a while and the whole day passed
하루는 왜 스물네 시간일까
Why is a day 24 hours

수박 아줌마는 얼룩무늬 치마
Lady watermelon wears a striped skirt
참외 할머니는 귀머거리 할머니
Grandma melon is a deaf grandma
사과 외숙모는 친절한가봐
Auntie apple seems nice
딸기 내 친구는 사랑스러워
Strawberry my friend is lovely

좋아 좋아 좋아 좋아
Like like like like
좋아 좋아 좋아 좋아
Like like like like
좋아 좋아 좋아 좋아
Like like like like
좋아 좋아 좋아 좋아
Like like like like
딸기가 좋아
I like strawberry
딸기를 사달라고 졸랐어
I asked someone to buy me strawberry
딸기를 먹지 않고 웃기만 했어
I didn't eat strawberry, just smiled
나는 왜 이렇게 너를 좋아하는걸까
Why do I like you so much so
나는 왜 니가 좋은지 몰라
I don't know why I like you
그건 정말 몰라 (예) 나도 몰라
I really don't know (yeah) I don't know either

새빨간 딸기는 너무 아름다워
Bright red strawberry is so beautiful
포도 아저씨는 꿈꾸는 사람
Uncle grape is a dreamer
설탕에 찍어 딸기를 먹었어
Had a strawberry dipped in sugar

좋아 좋아 좋아 딸기가 좋아
Like like like I like strawberry
좋아 좋아 좋아 딸기가 좋아
Like like like I like strawberry
딸기가 제일 좋아 
I like strawberry the best
맛있어 
It's good.

Maybe they should have been ranked higher because...  Arguably, they kicked off the indie scene in Korea.

Maybe they should have been ranked lower because... While their indirect influence lived on, their direct influence was for the most part limited to just one album. Does this make them more influential than, say, Jang Yoon-Jeong [장윤정]?

Why is this band important?
The year is 1995, when K-pop was nearing its decisive turning point in 1996/1997. The pop culture scene just exited the oppressive mood of the military dictatorship that lasted until 1993, and was on its way to the heavily commercialized form of today. The mainstream artists were mostly dance "musicians" who peddled soulless music accompanied with catchy tunes, plagiarism and plenty of lip synch, or talented singers selling out their abilities to saccharine "ballad" songs. The underground music scene, whose resistance to the contemporary politics fueled much of its creativity, was fading along with its nemesis. The famous indie music scene in front of Hong-Ik University was not yet to be.

Enter Pipi Band, who bucked the trend in every way. The band involved no dancing. The tunes were scratchy and strange. The lead (female!) singer was not terribly pretty, and could not sing. (There are unconfirmed rumors that she was brought into the band specifically because she was so bad at singing.) Their lyrics were at best nonsensical, at worst insane. They rarely appeared on TV. But they kicked and barged their way into public consciousness by the sheer force of their weirdness. Just one listen was all you needed to furrow your brow in confusion, and turn to your friend and ask, "Have you heard this song?"

This weird band became more famous. But the raised profile only appeared to goad the band into becoming even weirder and more resistant to the prevailing trend. On television, they would sing with a bullhorn instead of a microphone to mock other "singers" who resorted to lip synching. If a TV show compelled them to play canned music, they simply stood around and refused to play the instruments. Everything finally came to a head when Pipi Longstocking -- the changed name of the band after they replaced the vocal -- spat at the camera and raised their middle finger during a live telecast of a popular music program. Ban from television followed, and the members split up to go their own way.

Pipi Band is important because they kicked off two very significant trends in K-pop that live on today -- resistance to the new mainstream, and being weird. Although the corporatized, pre-packaged "bands" are currently the mainstream in K-pop, Korea still has a robust counterculture that involves true singer-song writers and artists who are willing to push the boundaries of normal. Although the band's direct influence was not much more than a flash, it did what every pioneer did -- pointing to the road less taken, although they themselves may have only taken a few steps toward it.

Interesting Trivia:
- Vocal Lee Yoon-Jeong is a daughter of Lee Gyeong-Jae, a prominent politician. She was a ballerina by training. Currently, she is a stylist for the recent crop of celebrities.
- The bassist Kang Gi-Yeong used to belong to Sinawi [시나위], probably the greatest heavy metal band in K-pop history. He has now taken the stage name of Dalparan ("Moon Blue") [달파란], and remains influential in Korea's indie music scene.

Got a question or a comment for the Korean? Email away at askakorean@gmail.com.

Jumat, 06 Agustus 2010

Ask a Korean! News: Korean Food in America, and Rice

One of the most common questions that the Korean receives is: Can the Korean recommend any good Korean restaurant in [area]? This may sound like a simple enough question, but it is very difficult for the Korean -- because he thinks vast majority of Korean restaurants in America are terrible.

The Korean is not a picky eater; one does not get to be 6' 1" and 190 lbs by refusing a lot of food. Instead, he is a judgmental eater. While the Korean rarely refuses to eat any food, he nonetheless has a discriminating taste about Korean food and avoids going to bad Korean restaurants (or bad restaurants in general.) And by "bad Korean restaurants," the Korean means "every Korean restaurant in a given metropolitan area except for two or three, at most five."

And it is difficult to describe why the majority of Korean restaurants are so bad, because there are so many things are wrong with them. For many of them, it is as if the Korean asked for a dry-aged porterhouse and what comes out is a stale Big Mac. When the ignorant masses eat the stale Big Mac and praise it as if it is the most perfect dry-aged porterhouse (see, for example, David Chang and his fraudulent franchise,) the Korean is at a loss for words.

(An aside: lest there should be any confusion, the Korean also thinks that vast majority of Korean restaurants in Korea are also terrible, although obviously there are many more good Korean restaurants in Korea. But that's a topic for another day.)

Part of the difficulty is the fact that most Americans -- Korean Americans included -- have no exposure to what an excellent Korean dish is supposed to look like and taste. The Korean's new favorite food blog, 악식가의 미식일기 ("Epicurean Diary of an Anti-Gourmand") written by a food columnist Hwang Gyo-Ik, gave the Korean a possible way to break into the subject by discussing the most common Korean food -- rice.

"Rice? How special could rice be?" you might ask. If you think that, please read the translation below.

-------------------------------------------------

What is Delicious Rice?

Cooked rice is the most important thing in Korean cuisine. It is the same with bread in Western cuisine -- no matter how tasty the dish, the restaurant could never score high if the bread quality is poor. In Korean cuisine, no matter what the food is, the rice has to be delicious.

Rice was introduced to Korean Peninsula over 4,000 years ago, but it took considerable amount of time for rice to take the place as the staple. Until then, Koreans generally ate mixed grains. Even in the Three Kingdoms era [TK: from BCE 37 through A.D. 562], rice was reserved for the noblemen. Also, the means of cooking grains -- whether rice or mixed grains -- was not the same as today.

At the National Central Folk Museum, one of the most common artifacts of the Three Kingdoms era is a steamer. The ancient steamers show that generally, grains were either ground into powder or taken as whole, and steamed. Samgukyusa [TK: ancient history book chronicling the Three Kingdoms era] also features a story about a rice cake before one about cooked rice. The story goes that in 17 A.D., when King Namhae passed away, Norye and Talhae yielded the throne to each other. Talhae then suggests that each bite into a rice cake, because it is said that a wise man has more teeth.

It was about 1,300 years since our ancestors turned rice grains into cooked rice and consumed it as an everyday food. In other words, for over 2,000 years since the introduction of rice, our ancestors either made porridge or rice cakes. While the advancement of pot-making and grain-hulling technology must have been connected to the reason why it took such a long time between cultivating rice stalks and making cooked rice, I believe that the accumulation of knowledge about how to cook the rice also played a factor.

Rice is a dish that requires a truly sophisticated skill. But nowadays, people do not understand this -- because of electric rice cookers. Worse, there are so many people who cannot make decent rice even with an electric cooker. I think this is because the current trend is such that while people care about how the food tastes, they are generally apathetic about how the rice should taste.

There are a number of hanjeongsik [TK: grand course meal that features dozens of side dishes] that charge anywhere between $10 to $50~60 per person. [TK: assumming $1 = KRW 1,000] It is very difficult to make an assessment at a restaurant like this, because there are so many different kinds of food involved. It is generally a series of dishes that I alternately like and do not like. In such a case, I just focus on one thing to judge the level of food at the restaurant. That thing is none other than rice.

Korean food is divided into rice and banchan. [TK: side dishes.] The flavor is only complete after the two mixes in the mouth. The reason why the side dishes such as kimchi, jang'ajji [TK: pickled vegetables] and jeotgal [TK: fermented seafood] are generally salty or have intense flavor is because they are made in consideration of the harmony with rice, which tastes as if it has no flavor. In other words, the rice subdues the intensity of banchan's flavor and extracts the deeper flavor that those banchans hold. Thus, if the rice is not tasty, the true flavor of the side dishes cannot be enjoyed no matter how many dozens of them appear on the table.

This is what delicious rice is like: it is freshly made, with a shiny glint and moisture. It is savory and sweet; once in the mouth, each grain should feel alive individually. When the tongue wraps individual grains of rice, the saliva adds to the sweet flavor. It should neither be too soft or too hard, but cause a delightful friction between the teeth.

Unfortunately, the chances of meeting rice like this is low. Instead, there is rice that smells like the rice husk because it was not washed properly; rice whose grains are in tatters because it was soaked in the water for too long; yellowish rice because the rice was sitting in the pot for a whole day after being cooked; rice with beans that smell like uncooked beans because the beans were not soaked in the water; rice that tastes undercooked because it was not finished properly.

The problem does not only lie in the restaurant owners who shamelessly present these kinds of rice; it also lies with the customers who simply eat them without sending them back. Rice is the most important thing in Korean cuisine; how can people be so generous with the flavor of rice? Is it that difficult to make delicious rice? Let us give some thought about how to make delicious. People generally do not have traditional  kitchens anymore, so let's suppose we are cooking with an electric cooker that everyone has.

First, the rice has to be washed to take out any remaining husk and dirt on the rice. The rice has to be washed correctly -- it needs to be rinsed quickly. If one takes too much time, the smell of the husk seeps into the water and the rice ends up smelling like the husk. Pour clean water into the rice, quickly mix two or three times, and drain the water within 10 seconds. Repeat until the drained water comes out clear. Once washed, soak the rice in water -- delicious rice requires the presence of water inside each grain before it goes on the fire. Soak around 1-2 hours in winter, about 30 minutes in summer.

After the rice boils and the rice cooker switches from "Cook" to "Warm", finish the rice by letting it sit for about 10 to 15 minutes. If you let it sit too long, the rice becomes sticky and watery. Once the rice is finished, get a spatula and quickly mix the rice along the edge of the pot. This is done to evaporate the excess water, to maintain the shape of the grain without mangling them and to make the flavor uniform within the pot. If you apply too much pressure mixing the rice, the rice will be caked.

Now, try the rice. The flavor of rice is determined by the shine, aroma, flavor, consistency and texture. Feel the rice not just with your tongue, but with all five of your senses. First take a look at the white, shiny rice; then smell the aroma; then feel the consistency, texture and the slightly sweet flavor; then finally feel the tactile sensation going over the throat.

Thanks to electric rice cooker, this much skill is enough to cook delicious rice. In the old days when the rice was cooked in a cast-iron pot on a wood-burning stove, delicious rice required a near godlike eye for the fire. If the water looks like it will boil over, it needs to be subdued by pouring water on top of the lid; kill the fire just at the right time to finish the rice; and most importantly, one must know just the right time to finally open the lid.

This should confirm that making delicious rice is a sophisticated endeavor. One might think that the sophistication requires one to be more forgiving, but for the owner and the cook for a hanjeongsik restaurant,  it is their natural duty to pay attention to each detail, because missing even one detail ruins the taste.

Speaking of hanjeongsik restaurants, recently the way they serve their food is becoming strange. At some point, there was an argument that Korean food should be served in courses instead of on a single table with the excuse that doing so will globalize Korean food. Apparently, some restaurants accepted this argument and considers course-serving to contribute toward Korean food's globalization and advancement toward haute cuisine. Of course, there are Korean dishes that can be developed into a stand-alone dish, and there are Korean foods that have a potential to be appropriately served in a course. But seeing the way hanjeongsik places serve their food in courses, only the form is set, not the flavor. Korean dishes that used to be paired with rice should have been cooked such that they can be enjoyed by themselves, but that has not happened. (I will expand on this later.)

But the bigger problem at these hanjeongsik places is rice. After a few stand-alone dishes appear in courses, the rice and other side dishes are laid out on the table. At this instance, white rice is rare. The most common one instead is the black rice. Black rice has strong aroma and sweet flavor, which only serves to conflict Korean side dishes that are salty, spicy and aromatic. Worse is a restaurant that serves rice mixed with all kinds of things like beans, chestnut, ginseng, date, ginko, aromatic rice, black rice, etc. I really question what they were thinking -- do they really think this saccharine rice full of different aromas will pair well with Korean side dishes?

But most people who receive this absurd table simply eat without complaint. I wonder if they think that since they paid that much, they must finish the course with something unusual, like an uncommon bowl of rice. I wonder if this happens because people eat their food not with their mouth, but with their money.

맛있는 밥이란 [악식가의 미식일기]

Having read this, please do not tell the Korean about your favorite Korean restaurant experience anymore. He hates ruining people's memories.

Got a question or a comment for the Korean? Email away at askakorean@gmail.com.

Rabu, 04 Agustus 2010

Ask a Korean! News: North Korean Soccer (Part III)

[Part I]
[Part II]

This is the final part of the translation of Mr. Joo Seong-Ha's account of North Korean soccer history and analysis.

-----------------------------------------------------

While North Korean women's soccer could not avoid the lack of food and the height disadvantage, it nonetheless advanced by leaps and bounds in the 20 years since its beginning, surprising the world soccer community. North Korean women's soccer is currently ranked fifth in the world, highest in Asia. While the national team's record is subpar, the U-20 team beat Germany -- ranked first in the world -- in the 2006 FIFA Youth World Cup held in Moscow.


North Korean women's soccer team celebrates victory.

This is the first championship for either North or South Korean team in any game hosted by FIFA. North Korean women's team was again the champion in the U-17 World Cup held in New Zealand in 2008, proving again their mettle.

The reason for the women's soccer team's success includes tenacious mental strength, rigorous training, high rewards and excellent coaches. The women's team trains with the men's team in North Korea. The 12 km run on every Friday is notorious for its difficulty. Once victorious in the World Cup, the players not only receive the People's Athlete honors but also their entire family receives Pyongyang citizenship. Because the women's team does relatively well, the better coaches prefer to coach the women's team.

Why women's soccer team, and not men's? Personally, I think North Korean women's innate toughness must have played a factor. As the proverb goes, "Southern men, northern women" -- women from Hamgyeongbuk-do Province, the northernmost part of North Korea are particularly tough and tenacious. Including Gil Seon-Hee (from Gilju, Hamgyeongbuk-do,) winner for the Asia MVP and idol for North Korean female students, more than half of the U-20 are from Hamgyeongbuk-do.

Soccer is undoubtedly the most popular sport in North Korea. Other sports popular in South Korea, such as baseball or golf, have been excluded after having been branded as capitalist games. Because of soccer's popularity, for each FIFA World Cup there is a recorded telecast of major games that lasts for about 40 minutes, regardless of whether or not North Korea made the finals. That may not seem much, but it is a significant gesture in North Korea. Because there is only one channel that is broadcast over the entire country, and because that channel only goes from 5 p.m. to 11 p.m., 40 minutes is a precious block of time.

But not all games are shown on television. Even the ones that show on television appear several days after the fact. Because of that, diplomats would visit hotels to watch the games during the World Cup. In the hotels that house foreigners, live telecast is available through satellite. Games held in Europe usually begins around 1 a.m. Many children of diplomats would stay awake to wait for their father's phone call. When the father calls to tell the final score after watching the game, the children come to school the next day to relay the score to their friends who are eager to listen. I recall a story from one diplomat's son, whose father said after tallying the final score: "Son, why can't we make it to World Cup just once, when the people are so passionate about soccer?" That diplomat must have gotten his wish after North Korea advanced to the World Cup finals this year.

Soccer is the most open aspect of North Korea. There are even North Korean players who play abroad, such as Hong Yeong-Jo (Russia) and Kim Young-Jun (China). Team North Korea tends to have an open door, even including Jeong Dae-Se who plays in Japan and An Yeong-Hak who plays in South Korea. Because many players play abroad, and because they travel abroad often, the North Korean soccer players clearly know the vast gap between their own country and the world. Likewise, they are well aware of how South Korea lives. There are few other groups in North Korea who are internationalized to this degree.

How would such North Korean soccer players act when they come across one of their own who defected into South Korea? Hwang Bo-Yeong played ice hockey in North Korea until he defected in 1999. He subsequently joined the South Korean national team, and ran into North Korean players in an international game. According to Hwang, North Korean players reacted very coldly, calling him "Enemy" and saying "Traitor to the nation is beneath a human being." This is perhaps a reflection that compared to soccer players, ice hockey players have much fewer chances to go abroad.

Last April, Moon Gyeong-Min, a former North Korean soccer player who defected into Seoul, visited the North Korean national team who was staying at the Seoul Mayfield hotel. While many of the players were his friends, the players who recognized him pretended not to see him, turning their gaze somewhere else. But the starting attacker Hong Yeong-Jo continued to look at his direction. Apparently the two lived in the same apartment in North Korea, calling each other brothers.


Hong Yeong-Jo, captain of North Korean national team.

There is no telling what Hong was thinking. But he traveled extensively, and his father Hong Hyeon-Cheol is the manager of the 4.25 Athletics soccer team. It appears that Hong had strong enough background to have the confidence to continue gazing at Moon.

Moon also visited the North Korea-Japan game, part of the East Asian Cup held at the Daejeon World Cup Stadium, in July 2005. Again this time, the North Korean players averted their gaze. But according to Moon's grandmother who was living in Pyongyang until she defected later, the players quietly spoke among themselves that "Gyeong-Min made a trip to cheer for us."

In 2002, North Korea made a recorded telecast of the South Korean team's games, reporting South Korea's advancement into the semifinals. This was a significantly conciliatory gesture compared to just a few years previous. In the 1990s, the World Cup seedings were on the message boards in front of North Korean sports team buildings. While each group had four countries, only one group had three countries. U.S.A. was listed, and so was Japan; so the only remaining possibility is South Korea. Even if it was a transparent cover-up, North Korea never used the words "South Korea." Despite that, majority of North Koreans were always interested in their brethren's advancement to the knockout stage. I am certain that South Korea's legendary semifinals run was a happy news for the North Korean people as well.

North Korean soccer also has an open door toward South Korea. The national team trains in Kunming, China thanks to South Korea's aide. South Korea also provided aid of athletic equipments. But the infrastructure of North Korean soccer is extremely rudimentary. For example, the U-12 players who came to train at Kunming wore sneakers, not soccer cleats -- and this was a specially selected team.

The more strained North-South relationship is also chilling the sports exchange, because North Korean aid cannot be provided without government approval. A South Korean organization gave soccer cleats to the U-12 North Korean girls' soccer team in China, only to take them back because the final approval from the South Korean government did not come in time. Although the cleats were eventually handed out at the end, one can only imagine the disappointment felt by the young North Korean children when their first-ever soccer cleats of their own were taken away. Maybe a decade later, by the time those girls grow into national team players, North and South Korea might run the unified soccer national team.

Unified national team is a constant topic as an event to show the North-South reconciliation and coexistence. It is a measure that can be easily taken by each government, and has a great symbolic effect. The skill differential between the North and South may be an issue, but given that the South has the better men's team and the North has a better women's team, both country can save face by yielding the same amount in men's and women's team. It does not seem too far fetched to imagine a soccer team representing Korean Peninsula, under the banner of "Korea".

[북한축구해부3]-서울에서 탈북한 형을 만난 홍영조 [Nambuk Story]

Readers -- please note that Mr. Joo wrote this post before the World Cup. After the North Korean team returned with disappointing result, it has been reported that the team coach is now relegated to forced labor at a construction site after six hours of interrogation. It is not like anyone needs a reminder of this, but North Korea really is a messed up place.

Got a question or a comment for the Korean? Email away at askakorean@gmail.com.

Senin, 02 Agustus 2010

Are Koreans Prone to Conspiracy Theories?

Dear Korean,

Why are Koreans so prone to believing conspiracy theories? I have spent a lot of time in developing countries, and while all have different cultures, one thing they had in common was their propensity to believe bizarre conspiracy theories. While Korea is a wealthy country, it still seems their thinking has not caught up with their wallets. Their propensity toward conspiracy theories is very much a developing world way of thinking. Sure, you find conspiracy theories in the West, but mostly from college freshmen and pot heads.

Asianequation



Dear Asianequation,

It is true that conspiracy theories are rife in Korea, and they play a major role in Korean public life. One needs to look no farther than the Mad Cow scare that gripped the country two years ago. While there were legitimate kernels of truth about America's lax regulation against Mad Cow Disease (for example, not accounting for cross-infection until April of 2009,) those kernels were popcorned into utterly crazy ideas that the U.S. is out to kill Koreans with infected meat in the name of profit. More recently, certain South Korean political groups claimed that the South Korean government was falsely accusing North Korea for the attack by manufacturing the critical piece of evidence (which is Korean lettering discovered on a piece of the exploded torpedo shell) in order to gain advantage in the upcoming regional elections. In fact, the political groups that made those wild charges ended up gaining in the regional elections.

Why is this happening? First, try answering the following question:

Q. Which one of the below events did not happen in Korea in the last 50 years?

a. President ordered a prominent opposing politician to be kidnapped while the politician was traveling in Japan, to be dropped into the sea between Korea and Japan from a boat with a dead weight tied to his ankles. The politician barely survives because the Japanese coast guard gave the boat a chase.
b. The United States CIA bugged and eavesdropped on Blue House, the presidential residence of Korea.
c. Paratroopers attacked peacefully marching citizens of a certain city, eventually killing more than 600 people in the process. No one outside of the city heard of the massacre for days, because the dictatorship cut off the phone lines of the city and embargoed every television, radio and newspaper in Korea.
d. A prominent politician who fought against dictatorship all his life agrees to merge his party with two other parties that were heirs to the dictatorship, with a secret written promise to amend the constitution so that would change Korea's political system into English-style proportionally representative parliament.

The answer is: e. All of the above happened in Korea in the last 50 years. And these are just four examples of all the incredible things that happened in Korean politics.

 Prominent opposition politician Kim Dae-Jung gives press conference
after surviving from being kidnapped. Notice his busted lips.

In fact, Asianequation hit the nail on the head -- that the people of developing countries are prone to believing conspiracy theories. This is not because the people in developing countries are stupid; it is because insane stuff like the examples above tends to happen in developing countries. If one crazy thing can happen, why not another crazy thing? The fact that governments have little transparency only makes this worse.

And again, the key thing to remember about Korea is that it escaped being a developing country in no less than 20 years, possibly less. Heck, the Korean is only 29, but he remembers when Korea was a developing country. It is Korean people's towering achievement that Korea moved from a war-torn hellhole into a gleaming postmodern country in just 60 years or so. But it is too much to expect that Korea shed every aspect of a developing country in that process. This is particularly true in politics, where the lowest common elements of the society often reveal themselves.

Got a question or a comment for the Korean? Email away at askakorean@gmail.com.