THE SINKING OF THE MV SEWOL
I have been back blogging this past week. In light of the recent tragedy of the MV Sewol sinking, there is one particular topic/event that I have been hesitant to post about for the past two weeks: school field trips.
Yeongdo Girls High School students bused to the Busan Museum in Daeyeon-dong, Nam-gu for their annual field trip five days before Danwon High School students boarded the ship that would ultimately never reach Jeju Island, the destination of their own field trip.
A small percentage of my students from different classes posing for a photo after exploring the museum |
The whole of South Korea is in agony over this tragedy. While some passengers were rescued, many more were not - including hundreds of students just one year older than the ones I teach and have the privilege of continuing to teach.
THE AGONY, THE ANGER, THE SHAME, THE GRIEF
I can relate to only a very small percentage of it all. Culturally and linguistically, I am many levels removed from directly experiencing the full gravity of this loss, and so I feel unfit to even broach this topic. However, because I am here in Korea, continuing to teach high school students, and basically daily encountering and re-encountering the ghost of April 16, I suspect that I will have opportunities to write more about this later. For this post though, I simply want to accomplish two things:
1) Acknowledge the aforementioned heavy feelings shrouding the heart of the nation, and
2) Without detracting, distracting from, or devaluing the aforementioned, celebrate:
THE HOPE, THE UNITY, THE STRENGTH, THE LIFE
of South Korea. I continue to be impressed by this nation's ability to unite together and stand its ground. Unity may crumble, strength may wane, life may be lost, but, no matter how bleak the hour, I believe Hope still reigns at the end of the day.
As Korea grapples with the reality of hundreds of [young] lives lost, may she also not lose a beat in continuing to love and care for the millions of young people who are with us today.
Here are my students, who, everyday, I will learn to love more and more.
Here are my students, who, everyday, I will learn to love more and more.
YEONGDO GIRLS HIGH SCHOOL FIELD TRIP TO BUSAN MUSEUM
Students traveled in groups, boarding buses from our island to the mainland. I bused down with a group of students living in my neighborhood and, thus, was able to find the museum. |
There were other school field trips this day. The girls got excited over the sight of an all-boys high school also roaming around the museum grounds |
This student gives me the deepest bows every time she sees me! Extremely respectful and polite - I adore her! |
Teachers half-heartedly trying to create organized lines out of the hundreds of students milling around the square |
Alright - you got me. Putting away the camera now... |
This green-jacketed man perfectly matching the well-maintained shrubbery |
It was a Seattle weather kind of day |
Stella agreeing to be the girls' personal paparazzi |
The silliness memo did not reach me or the older, male teacher to my left... |
A PRAYER FOR SOUTH KOREA
Lord, give South Korea a Hope so extravagant as to pierce through this overwhelming current of despair. Enable her to, once again, rise from the ashes, assured of the beauty of Your plans for her and, especially, her children.
Amen! I pray continuesly for Korea. I pray what the devil meant for Bad, God will turn it for good. I love looking at how nice and clear those pictures you posted Mi.
ReplyDeleteMa, thank you for joining in prayer. Shared sorrow is half a sorrow. Your prayers and all of those emanating from South Korea and the rest of the world are not in vain!
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