Are Westerners Living in Korea Developing a Persecution Complex?

It has struck me that, for quite a long time, I have noticed a sort of heightened sensitivity in the foreign community living in Korea to any form of discrimination they might receive while living there.

Let's first note that there is quite a lot of racism in Korea, there is a fair amount of prejudice against non-Koreans.  This is usually in the form of general ignorance, however, rather than malice.  There are, of course, exceptions to this rule just like there is in almost every country in the world. 

There is also a general, almost institutionalised racism present in Korea that is slightly different to what I have noticed in many Western countries.  In the West, the media, the government and most well-educated people realise that racism is wrong and do not promote it.  General, sober, conversation between people often also has a guarded feel when the subject has a racial element to it.  Any form of prejudice expressed can be jumped upon by the liberal crowd and quite rightly so.  I do think, however, that there is an undercurrent of disquiet and discrimination that is still present pretty much everywhere.  As with most people, if you want to know how they really think, throw a few beers into them - this seems to do the trick quite nicely in the UK with regard to exposing the racists.

In Korea, things are different.  Sometimes it does feel like some forms of discrimination are enshrined in law and general everyday routine and awareness has to be raised about it.  It is easy to understand how laws on HIV and drug testing and mainstream television programs singling out 'foreigners' as specific generators of violence, sexual crime, and immorality make people upset, for example.  This is not just some moron on the street shouting racial abuse because he is drunk or just plain stupid, it feels like voicing your disgust could actually do some good and is needed to break a kind of spell of prejudice over some of the population in Korea.


Because of all of this perhaps, there do seem to be signs of a persecution complex forming in the Western community that live in Korea and in those that have left and tell their stories when they get back home.  Many Korean people do discriminate against us sometimes and what is important to recognise is that this can be both good and bad for us.  Strangely, I have always found it is the times when Koreans do not discriminate at all which regularly upsets me the most and I think many Westerners living in Korea fail to notice this when they are genuinely advantaged by discrimination and when they are disadvantaged by just being treated like everyone else.  Many simply want to have their cake and eat it and this might not be possible, perhaps we have to take the rough with the smooth.

Maybe if you are generous and patient enough to look through some of the negative articles about Korea I have posted on this blog, it might not escape your notice that they are mainly concerning the effect some of the negative aspects of the culture have on Koreans themselves.  Women and young people, in particular, appear to be severely hampered by their duties to older people and petty jealousies and worries over status - so important in a culture with a traditionally Confucian society - make so many people's lives a misery here.

A couple of weeks ago, I posted an article about the shabby treatment of native English teachers.  In this post, I readily admitted that Korean and South East Asians have a much harder time at work than Westerners.  Native English teachers have pretty sweet contracts and are mostly protected from any monkey business from their employers, especially if they work in a public school.  I accept that there are many horror stories, however, (which I mentioned in the post) but I have heard far worse from the mouths of Koreans themselves and what is so troubling is that they often just seem to accept it as normal practice in the workplace.  The major problem for most foreign teachers is the lack of discrimination they receive at work, though, and not vice-versa.

The point I was trying to make is that schools in Korea cannot get around their responsibility to their foreign teachers.  Native English teachers are usually young, have traveled from a culture that is completely different, and normally don't speak Korean too well.  They need help.  The fact is, though, that many schools in Korea do this very begrudgingly in my experience,  Trying to have them do something for you, even minor requirements, is a bit like pulling teeth.  This is not down to discrimination, however, it is because they are treating you as a normal member of the group at work.  Actually, we tend to get better treatment than any normal young new employee.  Korean people new to a job often have the hardest time of all; they usually do the most work, run around for their superiors, and may even be bullied.  Most of the time Westerners are discriminated against, in that they aren't made to perform all the duties of a new employee.  Native English teachers should really be thankful for the discrimination they receive in their schools.

There are a great many situations where we Westerners search up our sleeves and play the 'Foreigner card' roughly translated to a 'get out of jail free card.'  This has saved my bacon or avoided a myriad of awkward situations time and time again.  If I was a young Korean man or especially a young woman, I would have had an almost limitless number of mind-blowing situations to sit through in the last 3 years or so.  My good fortune to be a foreigner who is discriminated against is not lost on me.  This does not mean that I avoid all difficult circumstances in Korea, but I do slink away from a good fair few.  Koreans themselves are not so lucky and this is what I mainly get rather upset about, particularly as this often includes my wife.  As well as my natural empathy for her as a husband, I also get a bit of an earache and headache at home when I have to hear about what members of her family or work colleagues have said to her or the trouble they have put her through, all because she is a woman and/or younger than them.

The unfortunate thing about Korea - which is shared all over the world, but with perhaps a more of an ingrained intensity in Korea - is that high status rules.  If you are old and a man, you can expect to be treated well; if you are young, a woman, or an outsider, you will not be considered so much or treated with very much care and attention and perhaps not trusted so much either.  The handy thing about being an outsider is that many older Koreans don't understand us and we can also plead ignorance.  The one thing against us non-Koreans is that we receive even less trust than low-status Koreans because of the fact they can't comprehend us.  People will always fear and distrust things that they don't understand.  Historical isolation, invasion, and colonisation have further fueled a natural distrust of the outsider in Korea.  This is obviously the source of the xenophobic, insecure, and defensive atmosphere that one can experience in Korea sometimes and maybe why many foreigners feel persecuted.

There is this sense, though, that some feelings of persecution are going too far.  Often, some foreigners get so down on Korea that it seems as though everything Korean people do and say to them is an example of prejudice, suspicion, or even hatred.  I do not believe this is at all the case, most of the time we are not receiving special unwanted treatment.  I have a grumble every morning when I cycle to work when I notice about 10 examples of dangerous or at least inconsiderate driving in 10 mintutes, but this is not directed at me because of my big nose and blonde hair, many Korean drivers are just indiscriminately terrible with regard to others while driving, whether it be pedestrians, cyclists or other motorists.  My non-Koreanness has absolutely nothing to do with it and I suspect this is the same for many other situations that rub a lot of us up the wrong way while living in Korea.

Korea is topsy-turvy land, I do believe it can be a very odd place to live and I think the evidence from many foreigner's complaints is that it can certainly be infuriating, especially to Western eyes.  There are many things I personally don't like accepting, I want to change them or at least try, yet at the same time acknowledge that I cannot do that much (I do not think it hurts to try, though, one should not be defeatist about everything).  I don't believe that any of it is down to a special malice or nastiness within Korean people, however, they are generally as nice and kind as anywhere else I have lived or visited and there are many joys and lessons to be learnt from them and living in Korea in general.  They can sometimes make me annoyed, even outraged, due to some of their attitudes that are mainly caused by a cultural difference, but I have to say that persecuted is not a sensation that I feel while living here.

There are examples of persecution sometimes for sure, but let's not go over-board, not every problem that afflicts us in Korea is down to discrimination, far from it.  In my experience at least, my biggest issue is when they treat me like just another Korean.  I want to be understood as an individual, not as part of the group, I require some special attention and special understanding because I am not like them and I am not like anyone else either.  Indeed Koreans are not all alike, they differ from one another and one of my major complaints with the culture in this part of the world is that too often people aren't treated as individuals.  The group ethic has some huge drawbacks because of this and I believe the foreign community identifies and feels this with a greater degree of sensitivity.  It could be that this is the root of many of our problems with Korea and not persecution or discrimination.  We want to be recognised as individuals but instead get lumped into groups, sometimes with the Koreans at work and sometimes the best of us are thrown in with the bad and the ugly, like when the inevitable odd  foreigner turns out to be a criminal and all of us are tarnished by them.

A natural tribalism exists everywhere; grouping people into, 'us and them', is something that almost everyone does to some extent, it is an incredibly hard urge to resist.  Treating people as individuals without prejudice is the way forward and maybe a group-centred culture makes this more difficult.  Being outraged about poor treatment certainly has a place, but foreigners in Korea should stand-up for everyone receiving it in Korea, not just themselves.  It is not, 'us against them', we are all in this together.



Comments

Re: Are Westerners Living in Korea Developing a Persecution ...

Korean society is just plain inconsiderate of everyone, not just foreigners; discrimination happens but usually it's just irrational Confucian tradition (skewed age and gender roles); and when there is discrimination with foreigners, it's xenophobia, not racism specifically (unless you're black, in which case it is very much racism).  Not saying this makes it better (it doesn't), but pointing out how terrible Korean society is to anyone that's not family, friends, or in a business relationship.  

Blame Confucian beliefs for this (or a skewed interpretation of them).  Think about all the times no one held the elevator for you, moved aside for the subway doors, cut in line, were made to accept unreasonable responsibilities from employers, nearly hit by cars/bikes, etc.  If they don't know you, they most likely don't care.  

Worst example:  I once saw a married couple arguing outside a restaurant with their two little kids watching.  Suddenly the drunk husband started punching the woman in the face repeatedly.  People watched, but no one helepd.  I had to run over and pull the man off his bloodied wife from beating her relentlessly in front of their children.  I had to yell at other Korean bystanders to have someone call the police and finally another person came over to help hold the man back.  I talked about this incident to my adult classes and many thought I was wrong and shouldn't have intervened since it was "a private matter".  They said most people don't think it's their business and if you were to help it could inconvenience you.  They literally said this.  

Ultimately you're right: we're all in this together.  We all get treated poorly.  The problem is there's no sense of concern among people here and no care is taken to even consider changing things.   I'm American and anyone else who is knows how much criticism we give ourselves over etiquette and social rules.  We argue a lot and bitch more than Koreans but we keep each other in check and make sure we value any sense of community and social manners.  Koreans don't criticize each other like that (not publicly at least).  Those with authority (old ajassis) cling to the very tradition that gave them that power and don't want change, others are forced to accept it.  Korea is definitely changing economically and techonologically, but social change is incredibly slow here. 

So while some foreigners (many) like to have their cake and eat it too in terms of discrimination (e.g. trying to get into a club for free because you're a foreigner but bitching about other clubs that are Korean-only), Korean society shouldn't get a pass and people shouldn't brush it off by saying things like "Well every country has its problems," or "The grass is greener on the other side."  I get sick of some foreigners here who think they're cultured and enlightened by applying cultural relativism to issues like this (not that the author is).  While foreign teachers do get lots of benefits at work while our Korean peers don't (or SE Asian workers for that matter), it doesn't make it okay.  It's like saying a slave who's treated well by his master shouldn't bitch because other slave owners beat their slaves.  Obviously SE Asian foreigners get much worse treatment and Korean workers get treated worse than us (not always though!) but that doesn't mean foreigners don't have a right to complain.  Just like you said though, we just need to complain for everyone, not just foreigners.

 

TL;DR: I agree with the author but I'm much more bitter about Korean society.

 

Re: Are Westerners Living in Korea Developing a Persecution ...

Well put. Hence, the slave that stands up to them gets detroyed.  I'm tired of the muppets who make excuses for them, under the pretense of an "alleged civility" here. The masters deal out racist abuse, abhorent punishments, spiteful backstabbing, shitty stares and expect us not to notice. We don't exist, so how can we notice , have emotions? Therefore, we can't be hurt emtionally, but God help you if you cross one of these so-called , masterful, wonderful, dynamic elite.

Re: Are Westerners Living in Korea Developing a Persecution ...

Bringing the word "slavery" anywhere near a conversation about foreigners in Korea (but really we're talking about white English teachers, right?) who find stares and feeling uncomfortable to be evidence of racism is absolutely laughable and demonstrates a flatline durrrr of understanding about oppression and discrimination. Mostly, it kind of suggests the author is right.

Re: Are Westerners Living in Korea Developing a Persecution ...

@truemoboy666,  You clearly misunderstand my analogy.  I'm obviously not saying we're treated like slaves nor are Koreans.  It's simply saying that you shouldn't be discouraged from standing up about issues simply because there are others who have it worse.  Anyway, there's much more than dirty looks every now and then to demonstrate xenophobia or discrimination here.  You can't be that oblivious to it.  Other than that, you completely misunderstood the rest of what I said.  I was supporting the author, not arguing against him or her.  

Re: Are Westerners Living in Korea Developing a Persecution ...

The author of the post here.

You know, I think I understand everything you said in your first comment.  I don't think you were wrong about any of what you say.  We should all stand up to genuine racism, xenophobia, and general mistreatment.  

I have had a few replies to this post on facebook and on my own site that I feel have missed the point (not yours by the way) and asked why we shouldn't be sensitive to things like xenophobic TV programs.  I never said we shouldn't.  What I am concerned about is that the bitterness about some of things you mentioned about Korean society pushes some people too far into thinking that everything Koreans do is somehow a campaign of prejudice against us, including stares, saying we speak korean well, always being concerned that we can't eat spicy food, etc.

While some of these may be down to perhaps micro-aggression and some form of prejudice, many times they are not.  It is just them trying to be caring, polite, or just simple curiousity (at least we could give them the benefit of the doubt).

It is in those that sense malice in almost every interaction Koreans have with them (and i think there are quite a few out there) where I see a persecution complex developing. 

Re: Are Westerners Living in Korea Developing a Persecution ...

I understand.  While I am bitter about Korean society in terms of how they interact with one another (see my original post for examples) I think it would be crazy to get upset about the genuine curiosity or even care taken by Koreans ignorant of foreign culture.  Your example of Koreans who are concerned you can't eat spicy food is perfect.  There's no need to get upset at that.  While they're totally oblivious that Westerners can actually eat spicy food, it doesn't show any sort of ill intent.  It's actually more caring than anything and show a sort of fascination when they see you enjoying it.  That's very different from the sorts of xenophobic examples I was referrng to.  Luckily, I'm not that bitter in which I overthink and apply xenophobia to situations like that (and luckily I don't know anyone that bitter).