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Stickers were my best friend while teaching.

It is amazing how stickers can make or break a classroom experience. The kids need their stickers!

Also, I have been known to give stickers to stop kids from crying.

Red City - Toronto

We left the county a day or two late, but relaxed and prepared.  It was time to trade big blue skies for tall skyscrapers and wonderful lady friends,  but we didn't run away so fast that we missed my favourite farm on the way out ...




There was only one problem, and it was kind of a big problem - they were all out of pumpkin ice cream - Oh well, not everyday can be perfect.


Good bye Mom!
Good bye Dad!
J'aime bien ton char!


The next morning we started the day like champions with
bluegrass breakfast at the Dakota Tavern.
They bring you a mountain of food on a plate.
You share it with your friends.
They bring another plate.
You share it with your friends.
This continues until you have a massive food belly and you swear you will never eat again.
Ever.
It's delicious.

 
 
 
... and the weather was fabulous ...
 

Would you believe it?
Guess what we saw outside our streetcar?


Naturally we stopped ...
... and drank their free ginger beer.


"Woah. They are your people."


.... time to wander ...







Maybe we wandered a little too long ...


... but with a little taste of home ...


... a smile from this lady ....


... and a cocktail from a strange, strange place ..


... all gave us the energy to norebanging the night away ...

tunnel

The Han River bike trail is my church. I ride it home from school even though it takes an hour longer. This is the tunnel that separates the quiet expanse of the river park from the chaotic jumble of Seoul. The portal through which I often pass through reluctantly.

Seoul- Minolta SRT

Seoul- Minolta SRT

Seoul- Minolta Srt 35mm- Hangang tunnel

Seoul- Minolta SRT


Filed under: 35mm, minolta srt, photos, Uncategorized

September 2010 events

Author's note: There's bound to be updates to this month's events - keep checking back for more information and new events! If you have an event you'd like to plug, comment on this post with all the details. Please follow a few guidelines for the maximum benefit.



August 27 - October 10: Folks, it's time - time to get your Rocky Horror Picture Show on. This isn't just a showing of the movie - the original cast of the stage musical will perform the cult classic IN ENGLISH (a Korean narrator). Tickets range from 66,000 to 110,000 won - reserve them on the appropriately-named website. No word on whether callbacks and throwing things will be part of the festivities - but I'd bet more than a few people will come dressed... correctly...

September 3-7: Yeongdong Grape Festival - because quite a few fruits and vegetables need to have their own festival for all the hard work they do. There is an English language website, but not a whole lot of information... Yeongdong-gun, Yongdu Park.

September 4: Get your classical music fix and enjoy Brahms' Liebeslieder Waltzer with
Rachmaninoff Suite no. 2 for two Pianos. From the announcement:
[...] a collection of short chamber pieces reflecting on every facet of that most complex emotion. The music is full of beautifully embracing harmonies that soar and fall in a paean to the sometimes-challenging road to love. Encompassing hope, despair, longing, and joy, this intimate series of pieces handily reminds us of our greatest gift to one another.

Rounding out the concert will be the Rachmaninoff Suite no. 2 for Two Pianos performed by Brendan Hollins and Andreas Ehret. The Suite maintains the sweet tone of the evening in the Romance, but offers a refreshing complementary spice in the Waltz and Tarantella, reminding us that love is not without excitement.
This is being produced by Camarata Music Company, dedicated to creating opportunities for singing to anyone, and most recently did the Pirates of Penzance. 10,000 won in advance, 15,000 at the door of Chungdong First Methodist Church in Seoul (near City Hall station, lines 1 or 2). For more information, call 010-9806-8655 (English) or 010-2751-9675 (한국어).

September 4th and 5th - Join Actors without Barders as they journey through a selection of Shakespeare's most famous love scenes. AWOB will explore romances that explore the provocative, the preposterous, and everything in between. Puck and the Midsummer Nights Dream lovers guide us through the evening, but AWOB will also feature romances from Romeo and Juliet, Richard the III, The Merchant of Venice, Othello, Taming of the Shrew, and Much Ado About Nothing. Theater Gori (Hyewha station, line 4, exit 4) Walk straight between Zio Zia and Baskin Robbins, then turn left on the second street. Sept 4th at 7pm; Sept 5th at 3pm and 7pm, 10,000 won admission, actorswb AT yahoo.com for more information.

September 9 - 12: The Incheon International Clown Mime - we're going beyond that old 'stuck in a box' routine here - and it isn't just clowns. From 10 Magazine's teaser on the event: "Along with the Clownmime team from Korea, Djuggledy from Germany, Fire Fingers from Israel, Duo Cappuchino from Russia, Mr. Qwirk from New Zealand, Acrobuffos from America, and Yui from Japan bring you laughs from around the world." The English language website is a bit screwy in Firefox, so open it up in Internet Explorer instead.

September 9 - 13: Korea International Art Fair 2010 - 193 galleries in 16 countries bring their art to the COEX mall for your perusal. It's an expensive 15,000 won, but worth it if you're planning to make a day of it. Get more information at http://www.kiaf.org/.

September 11 - 25: The first fine art gallery in Haebangchon opens with a gallery entitled “Urban Excerpts: Meditations on the overlooked.” From the press release:
When reading a story, sometimes a seemingly unimportant fragment-- a line or phrase-- will grab our attention in such a way that it continues to resurface and resound for weeks or years after the plot and characters have faded. Perhaps it’s the rhythm of the words or a particular resonance with other elements in our thought life that causes a passage to leap forth from the page and assume a life of its own.

For Seoul-based, American artist, Adam Lofbomm, the entire city is a visual narrative full of such fragments just waiting to be excerpted, quoted and re-appropriated. Using various cameras as a sort of notebook, he sifts through the urban landscape, capturing ready-made elements for his mixed media compositions such as distressed surfaces, obscured typographical forms, and details of city infrastructure that are often ignored. Employing various digital and analog printmaking techniques in his process, he then combines these visual excerpts into painterly works that highlight the raw beauty of the city and challenge us to look out at our everyday world with heightened awareness.
Two receptions are available to us mere mortals: Saturday, September 11, from 5-9pm and on Sunday, September 12, from 3-7pm. The gallery will be open daily from 11am-7pm until September 18, and viewings are available by appointment from September 19-25. For more information or directions, visit laughingtree.com.

September 18 - October 17: The Great Baekje World Festival - because kingdoms that reigned a thousand years ago need to remembered. The word 'world' in the name is a misnomer - how many other countries had a Baekje dynasty? Check out the IT Pavilion for some 3D technology hard at work, or learn the tourist-friendly story about Baekje and its kings. More information at its English-language website.

September 19 (2pm): A Ceili (Irish dance) happening in Insa-dong - dancing, music, and tea. What more do you need? Daesung Group Car Park in Insa-dong, or about halfway down the Insa-dong street. Hat tip to 10 Magazine for publicizing the event in the September 2010 magazine. The Irish Association in Korea is sponsoring the event, although I didn't see any information on its site before publication time.

September 22: Chuseok - more than just the Korean version of Thanksgiving Day, for most Koreans, it's a journey to the hometowns of parents or ancestors. For most foreigners living in Korea, it's an excellent holiday - the day before and the day after are considered part of the holiday. If you're working in Korea, you're all but guaranteed a three-day holiday; check your schedule to see if they're also granting the Monday before or Friday after off to connect it to the weekend. Catch up around the town you live in - trying to travel around the country during this holiday is bound to be a frustrating exercise in futility.

September 24 - October 3: The Andong Maskdance Festival - one of the best reasons to see the city of Andong. Why? Take an Important Intangible Cultural Property and make a festival out of it. For more information, check out the appropriately named maskdance.com.

September 24 - 26: The Seoul Drum Festival around Ttukseom station - headlining events include performances of plenty of international drumming teams. Don't forget about a Guiness World Record attempt at the largest percussion parade - get more information here.

September 28 - October 17: The Bucheon World Intangible Cultural Heritage Expo (BICHE) - an excellent way to learn and experience some of the area's intangible assets. Emphasis should be on the word 'experience', because there will be ample chances to do said activities, including making crafts, flying kites, and the like. Last year's event was one of the many canceled because of the swine flu, but this year holds no such problems. For more information, check out an excellent post on London Korean Links, or the official website.

Disclaimer: Chris in South Korea provides this monthly calendar as a service for you, the readers. No payments were received for event placement, and payment is not accepted for event placement.

Creative Commons License © Chris Backe - 2010


 

Sorry, someone is sitting there!

A few weeks ago I went to the cinema in Jangsan, Haeundae. Practically everything I enjoy about the cinema was there. Movie posters, old and new, selling their films to a world ready to be taken out of the everyday world for a gifted moment or two. There was the almost tangible feeling of the alluring anticipation of seeing a film on the big screen. Then sitting in your seat just in time to catch the trailers of future films, designed to do nothing more than entice you back to the cinema. Finally, being lost (hopefully) in a world that the director is trying to portray. All parts of the cinema magic were to be found in that typical Korean cinema.

For all that, there is something that greets you when you enter a Korean cinema that you won’t find in many other countries. Thrusting through the all-pervading odour of popcorn in the lobby, there is the smell of squid sizzling on a grill in front of a salivating customer. Also in the average cinema in Korea, you are likely to find groups of people standing haphazardly around the lobby. More than likely this will be thanks to the queue ticketing system.

You see, purchasing a ticket that will entitle you to a seat is not as straightforward as you might think. When going to the kiosk counter to purchase your ticket for both the film and the time you want to see it, you first of all have to ponder a plan on a computer screen. From this, you choose your seat and pay for it. You can then rightfully stand around in no particular order with other purchasers. They are all clutching their tickets, waiting for their number to be called. In addition to this gathering, there are the food and drink sellers waiting to take your order. That’s something you may not welcome, particularly if the smell of squid has shaken and not stirred your olfactory senses.

Depending on the time of day and the popularity of the film, you could then, like me, have entered into an empty auditorium. Spatial awareness having deserted me five minutes prior, I was left with a seat that looked fine on the computer but the reality was that pretty colours on a monitor can be misleading. It was only when seeing the real thing that the seat a row or two back looked more inviting. With no one around, did it really matter? I moved. The flick started and in walked a group of people, noisier than anybody else.

One eye on them and one eye on the film had me watch as they stopped and hovered over my row. While a silhouette in the darkness cannot portray every emotion clearly, the group appeared severely troubled that somebody could be sitting in their seat in the all-but-empty cinema. If the cinema had been crowded I would have been more than willing to move… But all I could do was chuckle to myself as I watched them slink away into some seats a few rows further down. Shortly afterwards, maybe ten minutes in, a couple entered. Coincidentally they had also chosen the increasingly popular row and it so happened that their seats were adjacent to mine. So within the space of fifteen minutes I had been shunned and isolated by one group and strangely accepted by another.

Working for a private English academy in a different time zone my body clock has had to adjust. But it seems that it has not adjusted completely. Subsequently this has led me to frequent later showings of films. However, it seems that regardless of the age restriction posted in western countries, the Korean authorities – or the cinemas that I have been to here – have chosen to ignore this. I have seen toddlers in 15+ rated films, babies crying because it is past their bedtime and where a gigantic explosion has not only destroyed a building but also mutilated several people. This laid-back attitude of what is proper for juvenile viewing also embraces Korean terrestrial television. Films such as Terminator Salvation, Die Hard and almost anything with adult material can be seen 24 hours a day. While swearing is not censored in English it is translated into Korean by subtitles. In fact the only censorship I have seen on TV is a knife blurred when it was used as a weapon. But we’ll leave Korean TV for another time.

© John Brownlie 2010


Poll results for August 2010

The poll question: When you travel, how important is it that English is spoken to you?

Absolutely imperative - I'd pay a premium to have English service / products
4 (2%)
Very important - I have to be able to communicate
13 (9%)
Important enough - I'll prefer the place / product that offers an English speaker
25 (18%)
Neither important nor unimportant
13 (9%)
Not very important - I'll muddle my way through if need be
38 (28%)
Not important - isn't traveling supposed to be an adventure?
41 (30%)

I must say I'm a bit surprised at the distinctive correlation (take out the 'neither important nor unimportant' category to see it). You guys and girls are distinctly adventurous travelers - and I would agree that traveling should be an adventure. So long as you can get from point A to B and are not in danger of digesting unsafe food or water, have at the adventure.

134 votes, poll conducted from August 1-31, 2010, self-selected voters, non-scientific test, yadda yadda yadda.

September's question, without further ado: After Korea, what's next?

Creative Commons License © Chris Backe - 2010

This post was originally published on my blog,Chris in South Korea. If you are reading this on another website and there is no linkback or credit given, you are reading an UNAUTHORIZED FEED.


3 days ago it was Gilad Shalit’s birthday…

3 days ago, she was out, with some friends. She spent a great evening, laughing, drinking.

There was, in a bar in Haeundae, a stand up comedy show, where some of her friends were performing. They were making jokes about those little things that happens in their everyday life, about the human stupidity, about the world in general.

And she was laughing. She couldn’t stop.

The night was beautiful, the weather was hot, and the alcohol didn’t stop filling the glasses. She finished her night talking with some newly found friends in a casino around some breakfast. She was exhausted but happy.

They were talking about everything, their countries, their lives, then suddenly his name popped up in the conversation; Gilad Shalit.

 Locked up for a bit more than 4 years now, he is being treated unfairly and can’t have access to the outside, and decent treatment. Nobody knows where he really is. He is alone and kept as a hostage by some people who want nothing but destruction and war.

He is just a kid, (he was only 19 when he was kidnapped) and he didn’t deserve this,  but was just at the wrong place at the wrong moment. Those people  (the members of the Hamas and other sister organisations) should be ashamed of their actions. They don’t want peace, they don’t think about other people as human beings if not they wouldn’t treat Gilad that way.

It was a saturday evening, like any other one in Busan, and Gilad’s name came to her mind,and she couldn’ t help but feel anger and rage.

An other evening, and somewhere in the Gaza strip a kid was alone in his cell, and nothing seemed to be possible to save him.

It was the 28th of August, his birthday. He should be out, free. The only pictures that should be taken of him, should be those taken in front of a cake surrounded by friends and family. But there was nothing she could do, even though she wanted to go out there, in that piece of land  called a strip and shout at all those people who let that horrible thing happened and who justify it with some political demagogic speach. They were making her sick. She wanted them dead.

That’s all she had: anger. This useless feeling. 

It was the 28th of August, she was having a good evening with her friends. She wished she had thought about him longer than 10 minutes that day.

A bit late but still,  from the other side of the world, Happy birthday Gilad.

The Weak Link in the Taiwan-US Alliance

Laurence Eyton’s portrait of an insecure Taiwan is a fascinating sociological study.

A navy petty officer, Liu Yueh-lun, was arrested on June 5, though the arrest was only made public a week later, for leaking military secrets. What Liu appears to have done is to pass a highly secret book of navy communication codes to China. While the case is still under investigation, it appears that Liu, who served on a destroyer in Taiwan’s navy and had access to code information, passed the material to his father, who did business in China and was being blackmailed by Chinese authorities.

The elder Liu was an ex-air force officer who started doing business in China in 1988. At some time in the past 10 years he fell foul of the Chinese authorities, being detained for two years on charges of smuggling both antiques and people – Taiwan has a considerable appetite for mainland Chinese prostitutes, as well as document forgery. He was then persuaded to buy his freedom by working for Chinese intelligence. For the past two years he had been obtaining information on codes and naval installations from his son and passing it on to China on his business trips, being paid about US$3,500 each time.

The Liu case is a matter of simple espionage, and is not the kind of matter that vetting civil servants will safeguard against. But that it should make headlines in the middle of the debate about vetting – whether accidentally or otherwise – has certainly taken the wind out of opposition sails. It is hard to protest that the government’s concerns about loyalty are part of a politically and perhaps ethnically motivated vendetta when such a flagrant case of treachery is making daily headlines.

And all this comes on top of a debate at the beginning of the month as to whether Taiwan’s most notorious defector, Justin Lin, an army officer who swam to China from the island of Kinmen nearly three decades ago, should be allowed to return to the island for his father’s funeral or whether he should be prosecuted by the military if he does.

It also follows the release of an alarming statistic by the Ministry of National Defense according to which more than 3,000 former Taiwan military officers are now either doing business or working in “consultancies” in mainland China. There is an overwhelming impression that Taiwan is in the midst of a security crisis. Is it?

Certainly the loss of political power of the pro-unification mainlanders who staff the civil service, the officer corps and the intelligence services, their feeling of alienation in a regime that stresses Taiwan’s de facto independence and the interests of ethnic Taiwanese, has been traumatic. They find themselves in the position of a colonial administrative class which, now that their colony has achieved independence, find themselves unwelcome and yet have no “home” country to return to.

They find that in the People’s Republic of China they are wealthy and have freedoms that many PRC citizens can only dream of and they start to think that mainland authoritarianism in which they can live well is to be preferred to Taiwanese democracy from which the Taiwanese wish to exclude them, a society where Taiwanese roots are becoming a sine qua non for advancement.

They feel that in Taiwan they lack a future, while the society that they have been taught to admire, China with its 5,000 years of history, is ignored and denigrated on a daily basis.

It is not surprising that an increasingly nationalistic mainland China should seem to such a group to be more in line with their sentiments and loyalties than a Taiwan vigorously pursuing “nativization”.

The root of Taiwan’s security problems can be found, therefore, in the disaffection of its administrative class, members of which are only now realizing that the country in whose interests they were raised and educated to work – the authoritarian non-communist Republic of China, with boundaries stretching from Taiwan to Xinjiang, Tibet to Manchuria – does not exist.

The country in which they actually live, however, the democratic 23 million-strong area that others wish to call the Republic of Taiwan, does not really want them.

It is, therefore, to the PRC they look, as the safeguard of so much they hold dear, a Greater Chinese nationalism, territorial integrity, Chinese culture.

Seen this way, a criticism might be made of Taiwan’s new political masters that they have not done enough to integrate mainlanders into their new democratic society. This is true, but it might also be said in their defense that it is hard to integrate – rather than alienate – a group when part of that democratization means stripping that group of its former privileges.

Some of the more thoughtful DPP politicians such as Wang Tuoh have suggested, however, that the question of security clearances and beefing up the intelligence services, even purging them of their mainlander personnel – which would leave them with a crippling manpower shortage – is not the answer to the problem Taiwan faces. It is not that a small number of people are disloyal, they point out, but that a large social group feels that Taiwan has no future for it. The DPP and the more radical Taiwan solidarity union stresses “Taiwan for the Taiwanese”, and non-Taiwanese have to ask, “What about us?”

After a century of colonial oppression, first by the Japanese and then by the “mainlander” exiles of the Chiang dynasty, it is perhaps understandable that Taiwanese show little interest in answering such a question to the satisfaction of those asking it. Understandable but hardly wise, politically or socially. The loyalty crisis is just a symptom of this wider problem.

A solution lies in a consensus between Taiwanese and mainlanders as to where Taiwan should be heading and what their various roles should be. So far almost no thought has been given to the question by either side, and real change is probably a generation away.

But, I agree with American officials expressing concern about Taiwanese officials leaking military secrets, that this is no reason to forgive treason. And, this conjecture is just scary.

Is it possible that President Ma and his KMT Elders are forcing a backdoor reunification by creating a military ‘team’ that would cause the US to say they could not be involved with defending Taiwan any longer?

These officers are just taking advantage of their good fortune and the under-defined relationship between the US and China.

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Filed under: East Asia, Military, Politics, USA Tagged: china, csis, efca, lui yueh lun, prc, taiwan

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